0% found this document useful (0 votes)
3 views

how-to-structure-a-paragraph

The document provides a guide on how to structure a paragraph, emphasizing the importance of a clear topic sentence, detailed body content, and a concluding statement that ties back to the topic. It outlines methods for discussing the topic in detail, including definitions, examples, and transitions to ensure logical flow. An example paragraph illustrates these principles in practice, showcasing how to effectively present and support an argument.

Uploaded by

kymani1715
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
3 views

how-to-structure-a-paragraph

The document provides a guide on how to structure a paragraph, emphasizing the importance of a clear topic sentence, detailed body content, and a concluding statement that ties back to the topic. It outlines methods for discussing the topic in detail, including definitions, examples, and transitions to ensure logical flow. An example paragraph illustrates these principles in practice, showcasing how to effectively present and support an argument.

Uploaded by

kymani1715
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

Faculty of Community Services

Academic Support & Resource Centre


How to Structure a Paragraph
THE PARAGRAPH
• Paragraphs are distinct sections in a piece of writing
• They usually deal with a single theme and are indicated by a new line or an
indentation
• Paragraphs help organize your essay based on the logical progression of ideas

HOW TO STRUCTURE A PARAGRAPH

1. Introduction: Topic sentence


• A topic sentence is a sentence that indicates what idea or thesis the paragraph
proposing and explaining
• An easy way to make sure your reader understands the topic of the paragraph is to
put your topic sentence near the beginning of the paragraph.
• Through the topic sentence, both you and your reader should be able to easily
summarize the paragraph in question
• As you are editing your work, underline the topic sentence of each paragraph
o If you can’t, your essay may be difficult to follow
o Every sentence in that paragraph should have something to do with the topic
sentence. If they don’t, move them to the right place or remove them

2. Body: Here you will discuss your paragraph’s topic sentence, using various forms of
evidence
• The topic should be discussed in detail
• Here are some ways to make sure you’ve covered your topic in detail:
o Describe the topic
o Define terms in the paragraph
Ø Especially new terms, or terms with which you think your target audience
may be unfamiliar
o Provide historical context
o Analyze the topic
o Use examples
o Cite data
o Use secondary sources
Ø Particularly academic sources
o Use an anecdote or story
o Compare and contrast
o Evaluate causes and reasons
o Examine effects and consequences
• Order your paragraphs so that each one follows logically from the previous one
• To make the logic more obvious, you can use transition words
Faculty of Community Services
Academic Support & Resource Centre
• The simplest way of indicating transition is by using words such similarly, likewise,
by the same token, yet, nevertheless, however, etc.
• Or, you may use longer phrases such as “It is ironic, therefore, that...”

3. Conclusion:
Here you are commenting and drawing connections
• Your conclusion is an opportunity to wrap up the paragraph and reconnect to your
topic sentence. You want to suggest that you have proved what you set out to do.
• In any given, singular paragraph, your concluding sentence should mirror your topic
sentence, and add a final thought on this topic sentence.
• This approach closes the argument presented in your paragraph.

EXAMPLE: A WELL-STRUCTURED PARAGRAPH


(Modified from an essay discussing Bridget Jones’ Diary)
This image of feminine beauty to which Bridget aspires, is one that has very much been
commercially created. As Bridget herself says, “Wise people will say that Daniel should like me
just as I am, but I am a child of Cosmopolitan culture, have been traumatized by supermodels
and too many quizzes and know that neither my personality nor my body is up to it if left to its
own devices” (Fielding, 59). In admitting this, Bridget is also admitting herself into the group of
contemporary women who buy womanhood packaged in polished and glossy magazines such
Cosmopolitan. Whelehon notes that these popular publications are good at making women want
what they don’t have, and feel insecure about what they do: “They wish us to believe that our
aspirations are attainable with just a little judicious remodeling and investment in the kinds of
commodities advertised within their pages” (Whelehon, 26). This need to invest in commodities
further underscores how the image of feminine beauty is impossible to obtain naturally, and has
been created by consumer culture.

• The topic sentence (underlined) in this example introduces a thesis: that idealized
beauty is commercially created
• The body of the paragraph discusses how this commercially created beauty ideal is
apparent in the novel, using supporting evidence
• The concluding sentence of the paragraph both comments and draws connections
(and can be used to lead into the essay’s next point)

Here are additional and valuable resources on structuring paragraphs (that were adapted for this
handout):
Driscoll, D. L., & Brizee, A. On paragraphs. Retrieved from
https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/606/01/
Paragraph structure. Retrieved from http://academicwriting.wikidot.com/paragraph-structure
The Write Site. Typical structure of a paragraph. Retrieved from
http://writesite.elearn.usyd.edu.au/m3/m3u2/m3u2s2/m3u2s2_1.htm

You might also like