Showing posts with label thesis statement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thesis statement. Show all posts

Friday, November 8, 2019

Essay (Part 2) Focusing on Thesis Statement, Introduction, outline subheadings

Mushtaq Ahmad Mahindro a CSS qualified person who has served under Federal Government Pakistan in various capacities. He holds Master degree in Political Science, Islamic studies after doing BSc.Hons. He has participated in many seminars/Conferences conducted on human, political, and organizational behavior both at national and international level. During the pursuit of his academic buildup, he has visited USA, Japan, Thailand, and Dubai. He has also served as Chief trainer in Kabul under a World Bank sponsored capacity building program. He is the author of CSS Current Affairs and Essays, The world in the next 50 years, and Log On to Success (Managing self and others). He has been a visiting faculty of Secretariat Training Institute Islamabad, Directorate General of Training and Research(Customs, Sales tax & Federal Excise), Lahore, and Islamabad, Postal staff college Islamabad. Above all, he is part of world team who believes in inspiring people and providing them tools of change and growth throughout the world.

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Thursday, November 7, 2019

How to Write an Essay Part 1 - Introduction Paragraph (with Worksheet)

In this video, learn how to write the introduction paragraph of an essay. Use this page to take video explains the hook, background information, and thesis statement, along with several examples of each. The video begins with a brief introduction about what an essay is, how many paragraphs to include, and gives information about the prompt.

The bulk of the video explains how to write the first sentence of an essay, also called "the hook," and gives five types of hooks, as well as examples of each. It goes on to explain what types of facts or information to include in background information on a topic. Finally, it explains what a thesis statement is and gives several examples on various types of topics, in each , explaining that the thesis statement includes both a main idea and three reasons, steps, examples, or parts of something. All four parts of this video series can be found at these links:

How to Write an Essay (Part 1)--Introduction to Write an Essay (Part 2)--Body to Write an Essay (Part 3)--Conclusion to Write an Essay (Part you for watching! Let me know if you have any questions or feedback in the comments.

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ESL - Parts of Essay: Introduction, Body, and Conclusion

This video is about the parts of the essay. An essay (in the USA) has three parts: introduction, body paragraphs (3 or more) and conclusion.

Details about each paragraph are explained into detail.

Download FREE .pdf: How to Write a Strong and Solid Thesis Statement at you have any other questions, please email us at explicitenglish@gmail.com

Happy English language learning!

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Wednesday, March 20, 2019

How To Write An Essay: Thesis Statements

A strong thesis statement will set you free!! In this episode I discuss what a thesis statement is and why it is so vitally important. Go to to get a free trial and 10% off your first purchase. Thanks to Squarespace for sponsoring this series!

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Sunday, January 6, 2019

Introduction to Thesis Statements | Essay Writing | The Nature of Writing

The thesis is the argument of your essay. This video explains how to craft a strong thesis that will interest an academic audience.

The first thing to note is that the thesis statement usually comes at the end of your introduction. Often that will mean at the end of the first paragraph, but in a longer essay it can come later.

Your thesis should express one coherent argument. A lot of students are taught to also include three subpoints, but that's not essential. In fact, make sure that you don't end up with three separate arguments instead of one.

A great way to check if you've crafted a good thesis statement is to see if it answers a "research question." Does your thesis merely state what topic you're exploring or is it actually answering an interesting question.

For more information, please watch the video and visit Nature of Writing is a Youtube channel and website dedicated to the teaching of English literature and writing.

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