The document discusses thesis statements, explaining that they capture the essence of a writing piece in a single sentence by revealing the topic, point of view, and plan. It states that a good thesis statement includes the specific topic being discussed, the writer's unique perspective or point of view on the topic, and a brief outline of how the writer will make their point. As an example thesis for the document, it provides: "Thesis statements are essential and easy for blog posts because they guide the reader using the topic, point of view, and plan." The document emphasizes that thesis statements should be intentionally constructed to focus the reader, rather than just selecting a random sentence.
The workplace ecosystem of the future 24.4.2024 Fabritius_share ii.pdf
Simple Guide to Writing Thesis Statements in Blog Posts
1. Thesis Statements: Why Use Them and How to Get Them Right
Try writing 10 sentences (not really) on what your post is about, and every single one will be lame. So, forget
all your preconceptions about them, and let's start from the beginning with a graphic.
A thesis statement captures the essence of a piece of writing by revealing the topic, point of view, and plan in a single sentence.
Topic
Thesis statements are that easy. Just like a math problem, if you plug in the right pieces, you'll get the right
answer. You start with the topic, which is your specific subject, not the general area. For example, here I am
writing about thesis statement for blog posts, not about good writing. Good writing is too general, and you
could slap it on any paper about writing. So, the specific topic is key.
Point of view
The angle the you take to write about the topic is your point of view. This should be unique to your blog post,
or it's not worth writing. You want to add an individual perspective to the subject you address, your personal
touch. For example, here I am claiming that thesis statements are essential for blog posts and that they are
easy.
Plan
The outline of how you are going to get your reader to see your point of view on the topic is your plan. By
outline, I'm not referring to a detailed map, but just a phrase or two about where you are headed. For example,
I am planning to show you how to easily put a thesis together by talking about the basic elements and how
they fit.
Thesis Statement
These are all the pieces, now we need to just build the damn thing. In this post, I've already done the work as I
have guided you through each step. When you combine the elements, make sure that the sentence flows nicely
for the reader. So, here is what the thesis for this post looks like in graphic form (compare it to the graphic
above).
Example for this blog post: Thesis statements are essential and easy for blog posts because they guide the reader using the topic,
point of view, and plan.
There you have it, a solid, specific thesis that guides the reader through this blog post and helps to keep them
focused. As I remind my students, you have to intentionally write a thesis statement, rather than just
picking a sentence that looks good.
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