Locating the Thesis Statement and Topic Sentence

By: Arianne Calaycay ABM 12-A

Acalaycay
2 min readOct 24, 2021

Locating the Thesis Statement and Topic Sentence The thesis statement is that sentence or two in your text that contains the focus of your essay and tells your reader what the essay is going to be about. The thesis statement usually appears near the beginning of a paper. It can be the first sentence of an essay. It more frequently appears at or near the end of the first paragraph or two. Read the entire text. Summarize the text you have just finished reading. Locate if the text has something similar to the summary you have written.

https://human.libretexts.org/Courses/Community_College_of_Allegheny_County/Developmental_Studies_(101_and_103)/05 %3A_Getting_the_Point/5.02%3A_Identifying_Thesis_Statements_and_Topic_Sentences http://guidetogrammar.org/grammar/composition/thesis.htm

Locating the Topic Sentence The topic sentence describes the subject of the paragraph and its main idea. If you can develop a nose for locating topic sentences, you can get the main idea from paragraphs quickly and thereby improve your reading speed and comprehension. How do we locate the Topic Sentence? Locating the Thesis Statement How do we locate the Thesis Statement? By: Arianne Calaycay ABM 12-A Locating the Thesis Statement and Topic Sentence The thesis statement is that sentence or two in your text that contains the focus of your essay and tells your reader what the essay is going to be about. The thesis statement usually appears near the beginning of a paper. It can be the first sentence of an essay. It more frequently appears at or near the end of the first paragraph or two. Read the entire text. Summarize the text you have just finished reading. Locate if the text has something similar to the summary you have written. https://human.libretexts.org/Courses/Community_College_of_Allegheny_County/Developmental_Studies_(101_and_103)/05 %3A_Getting_the_Point/5.02%3A_Identifying_Thesis_Statements_and_Topic_Sentences http://guidetogrammar.org/grammar/composition/thesis.htm Read the first sentence carefully. Three times out of five, the topic sentence is the first sentence. Consider what basic property or characteristic the paragraph describes. This attribute is the paragraph’s main idea, so the sentence that expresses it is your topic sentence. Think about the paragraph’s purpose. The paragraph most likely wants to impart a particular piece of information. If you can figure out what that piece is, you know the paragraph’s topic and can find the sentence that presents it. https://www.dummies.com/education/language-arts/speed-reading/increase-your-reading-speed-by-locating-topic-sentences

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