The final work will be written in Times New Roman font, size 12 with double spacing. The final work will also include a bibliography at the end with all the works and sources that you have used as a reference. It is also necessary to mark in yellow the thesis and the main ideas of paragraphs 1, 2, and 3. (minimum 5 academic sources), the thesis is not marked in yellow and does not follow the MLA guidelines will receive a direct 0.
TITLE: The title of the essay should catch the reader’s attention.
INTRODUCTION: The introduction is its own paragraph and begins by introducing the topic of study and the reason why it is important/relevant to study that topic. The introduction should culminate with the thesis, the engine of your argumentative essay. Remember that the thesis must contain an it is said and the I say with three arguments.
DEVELOPMENT: The development occupies 3 paragraphs and each paragraph presents one of the three ideas presented in your thesis. In each paragraph, you will present it is said that they contradict your idea, but you will use quotes and works from other experts to justify your idea and support your thesis.
CONCLUSION: Briefly emphasize the most important points (ideas) presented in each of the development paragraphs. It is essential that the 3 ideas of the thesis appear in the conclusion. Conclude and reiterate the idea of the thesis and write a good ending that encloses your study.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: List of references that you have used in your work
Scheme for the final test
TITLE: ________________________________________________________________________________________________
INTRO: The introduction should answer the following questions from the reader:
What is the community that you are going to study and why is it relevant to study it?
What are some of the problems that affect this community?
What ideas/comments have been said on this topic (these are the says)?
What is your thesis to solve community problems (The “I say”) and what are the three ideas that support your thesis?
Paragraph 1: The paragraph should answer the following questions from the reader:
What is the main idea of this paragraph?
What sources of “It is said” contradict the main ideal?
What sources support the main idea?
How does your thesis support this idea? Make the connections clear and obvious to the reader.
(Idea 1, two sources/citations for the “it is said” and two sources/citations that support the “I say” at least)
Paragraph 2: The paragraph should answer the following questions from the reader:
What is the main idea of this paragraph?
What sources of “It is said” contradict the main ideal?
What sources support the main idea?
How does your thesis support this idea? Make the connections clear and obvious to the reader.
(Idea 2, two sources for the “it is said” and two sources that support the “I say” at least)
Paragraph 3: The paragraph should answer the following questions from the reader:
What is the main idea of this paragraph?
What sources of “It is said” contradict the main ideal?
What sources support the main idea?
How does your thesis support this idea? Make the connections clear and obvious to the reader.
(Idea 3, two sources for the “it is said” and two sources that support the “I say” at least)
Conclusion: The paragraph should answer the following questions from the reader:
What are the main ideas that support the thesis? Mention them briefly.
What are the connections between your ideas and problems in the community? Briefly summarize how your ideas solve the problems you mentioned in the introduction.
End with a sentence that makes the reader think.