https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/pcfe9r/Ep128_Thesis.mp3

bls104_Writing Workshop: Thesis Statement and Skeleton Outline | Pedagogical Dialogues

Criteria for writing a good thesis statement

The thesis statement is the "bridge" between a problem statement and subsequent topic sentences that being each body paragraph (see MEAL Plan for developing a body paragraph:

  1. Problem statement (i.e., topic, indirect question, and significance)
  2. Indirect question (condition) from the problem statement
  3. Direct question (from the indirect question above)
  4. The thesis statement that answers the direct question

Thesis Statement

Remember that a thesis statement should have three sections:

Transition

Sentence connector, introductory phrase (e.g., prepositional phrase, participial phrase, or infinitive phrase), or subordinating clause connects what was said in the introduction paragraph (i.e., context of the problem, background information, etc.) to the thesis statement.

A topic

The thesis statement should include a topic (stated explicitly, without using a personal pronoun), which relates directly to the target audience of the essay. The topic is usually the subject of the sentence. Notice "there is/there are" is not being considered.

An opinion, claim, position, proposition, etc.