Monday, 6 April 2020

Paragraph Writing



A paragraph is a combination of sentences joined cohesively together to further a focused topic.

Steps to develop Paragraph are:

1. Plan
2. Gather
3. Order
4. Compose
5. Elaborate
6. Conclude
7. Review.

The seven steps apply to each of the four types of paragraphs: 1 descriptive, 2 expository, 3 narrative and 4 persuasive

A well-developed paragraph will advance a particular topic in a clear, united and cohesive manner.
Plan the Paragraph
Plan all paragraphs to include four key elements: a subject, a purpose, an audience and a genre. Deciding the subject -- or topic -- of the paragraph provides focus, which helps determine the purpose of writing. Establishing an audience and genre -- descriptive, expository, narrative or persuasive -- reveals the most appropriate tone and voice to use. For example, if you are writing a news story for a local newspaper, an expository paragraph is most appropriate.
Gather the Information
Gather information that supports the overall intent of the paragraph. Persuasive and expository writing relies more heavily on sourced details, while narrative and descriptive texts allow for more personal details. Not all of the information you gather has to be used in a single paragraph. An excess of information allows you to be selective and write informative and relevant paragraphs.
Organize the Support
Organize the collected information chronologically, spatially or by importance. Paragraphs
written chronologically follow a sequential or timeline pattern often used to write expository and narrative paragraphs. Order-of-importance means you either lead or conclude with the most pertinent piece of information and is most effective with expository or persuasive paragraphs.
Compose Topic Sentences
Composing the topic sentence is the most important the element of a paragraph, as it includes the subject and the intent of the paragraph. It will be succinct and yet informative, and all sentences that follow must relate back to the topic sentence.
Elaborate with Details
Elaborate on the topic sentence with the information previously collected.  Each new sentence in the paragraph should relate to the overall topic and move the paragraph forward. Transition words -- such as first, next, in addition to, along with, however, therefore, finally and for example -- are useful in developing coherency in the body of the paragraph.
Conclude the Paragraph
Conclude the paragraph with a single sentence, sometimes called the clincher. It will often restate the topic sentence in some way and provide closure to the reader. Most paragraphs will not end by introducing a new topic, which should be saved for the next paragraph.
Review the Content
Review the paragraph before it is a final product. This is often an overlooked but critical step in the writing process. This step allows you to assess the paragraph and make edits for errors in grammar and spelling, lack of cohesion and unity as well as ensuring that the paragraph achieves your desired purpose. This is also the time to check for varied sentence structure and proper word choice.

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