Exercise: Closed-Form and Open-Form Introductions
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Instructions |
Write two prospective introductions
for your research project, one closed-form and the other open-form. In the introduction
for the closed-form essay, a thesis statement should come at the
end of the paragraph. As the Essay Structure Options
explain, in the introduction for the open-form paper, the thesis
should not appear in the paragraph at all. Instead, the introduction
should end with a statement that you think does a good job of framing
the issue the thesis statement settles. Both paragraphs should be
cohesive, interesting, and well-written in a style appropriate to
a publishable paper. Of course, correct grammar, spelling, and format
are all important.
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Guidelines |
These introductions should both be for essays making the same argument. In other words, the issue with which you end the open-form introduction should be settled by the thesis with which you end the closed-form introduction. |
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Do not start out, end up, or reach too high
on the scale of abstraction. Broad claims about the topic — let alone life! — have no
place here. |
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Grammatical mistakes in your introduction immediately
make your reader doubt your competence. Any kind of error in the sentence that defines your focus or in your thesis
completely blows your credibility. Check your grammar (and spelling) carefully. |
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Length
and other requirements |
125-175 words for each introduction. Please put the word count
at the bottom of each, and label them as closed-form or open-form (though whether the introduction is closed-form or open-form should be obvious).
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Bring four hard-copies with you to class. |
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