Tuesday, March 24, 2015

How To Write A Paper: Writing Theme Papers ~ Jimmy Hall (404-580-1501)

High school students and college scholars all have to write English papers, History papers, and Business/Economic course papers and essays. How to write a paper and writing English theme papers are a big deal for students. If you are involved in any level of high school or university studies, this blog piece might be useful to you.

I am going to quickly teach you how to formulate and write your papers, essays, and themes. (Also great for University System Regents' Tests, etc...) Why, and how do I know about this stuff? 

Easy, I am a writer that operates a professional writing service - in addition to publishing hundreds of newspaper columns, magazine pieces, short stories, poems, essays, Christian studies, and general articles.


Steps For Writing Papers/Themes


Narrow The Focus: For starters, make your topic/focus as precise as possible, after first thinking about (or researching) as much info as you can in the time you have - whether minutes or months. 

Formulate A Thesis: Use the information you have thought about to write a thesis statement, preferably one that argues or proves something - that will be supported or defended by your info and material.

Declarative Topical Sentence: Start the project with a topical/declarative sentence. (Thereafter, also begin EVERY PARAGRAPH with a strong topical opening sentence, also).

Insert The Thesis: Write the thesis as the second sentence in the paper, sometimes even the first.

Divide The Thesis Into Three Sub-categories: Write a sentence separating the thesis into several smaller parts/subjects. 

Write A Filler Sentence: Write a sentence that relates to the basic subject, that adds info and makes good supplementary sense.

Write A Specific Paragraph-Closing Sentence: Close the paragraph with a sentence that ties the material together, and if possible leads into the next paragraph. (Use a paragraph-closing sentence like this  in EVERY PARAGRAPH.)

Write Individual Paragraphs About Each Subpart Of The Thesis: Write individual paragraphs focusing on each of the three or so sub-sections you divided the thesis into. 

Use this format:

* Topical Sentence.
* Two or three (or more) solid Factual Sentences explaining the topical sentence.
* Paragraph Closing Sentence.

Summary/Conclusion: Use the last paragraph to both summarize what you have already said, and then restate your conclusion or thesis as proven. Use the same paragraph format. IF length allows, you might have one paragraph for a Summary, and another for the Conclusion. 

You are done!

~ Jimmy Hall, MS; BBA, is a professional writer and owner of Jimmy Hall Writing Services (404-580-1501). He welcomes contact, and may be hired for various writing and editing tasks.




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