Kimberley Garcia and Rachael Benavidez
An effective paragraph should have:
- ONE clear point i.e. it says one specific thing.
- ONE clear purpose i.e. it does one specific thing.
What paragraphs SAY…
With the exception of paragraphs used to narrate a complex experience or event (which still have clear foci), most paragraphs make ONE clear point. That point is typically made in the topic sentence (or claim) of the paragraph. The rest of the paragraph supports and explains that point with evidence and reasons. To summarize, you should be able to state the main point of each paragraph with a single sentence (called the topic sentence); every other sentence in that paragraph should clearly support or develop that main point. When moving onto a different point, start a new paragraph.
What paragraphs DO…
Most paragraphs within an essay do one of three things:
- Present examples, facts, or ideas from a source for (later) analysis. This is essentially narration, description, or summary.
- Analyze examples, facts, or ideas to make specific points. In other words, they dissect and interpret relevant evidence, arguments, and theories.
- Synthesize points or ideas from various sources to make new theories, develop previous points, raise new questions, or draw conclusions.
Presentation Paragraphs
Presentation paragraphs give readers information that they, presumably, aren’t familiar with. They may describe something that you want to analyze or complicate: an experience, event, object, text, or idea. They may, alternatively, present a source or claim from a source that you want to challenge, explore or apply later in the essay. Presentation paragraphs do not typically include analysis (see below). They help the reader to separate the things that you see as straightforward facts from original claims that you are making through analysis.
Analysis Paragraphs
In analysis paragraphs, you zoom in on smaller features of the object or text to answer some critical question(s). In these paragraphs, you may point out and interpret important aspects of your evidence, “close read” a text, explain your reasoning, make comparisons, or use a theoretical lens to better understand something else. You might see these paragraphs as working through specific facts or ideas you’ve previously presented in the attempt to find an answer to the central question of your essay (or to demonstrate how you worked through available evidence and theories to develop your own thesis).
Synthesis Paragraphs
You need synthesis paragraphs when you are:
- Complicating or qualifying your argument (or someone else’s) up to that point through the engagement and incorporation of counter-evidence and counterarguments.
- Combining the ideas of multiple sources to expose an insightful similarity or difference or create a novel concept.
- Summarizing your previous complex argument to transition to a different path of inquiry (often by raising new questions). You often need a synthesis paragraph when transitioning between major sections of an essay. Hence, in this sense, they can also be thought of as transitional paragraphs or mini-conclusions.
- Drawing a conclusion based on the incorporation (i.e. synthesis) of all the analysis conducted in the essay.