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5.5: Tips for writing a thesis statement

  • Page ID
    25396
    • Alexandra Glynn, Kelli Hallsten-Erickson & Amy Jo Swing
    • North Hennepin Community College & Lake Superior College

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    Here are some tips for writing a thesis statement, especially an academic, researched, argument thesis statement (also called a “claim”).

    • Are there plausible counterarguments to your thesis (your argument, your central claim)? A good thesis has plausible counterarguments. For example, what if your thesis is: "The sky is blue"? You know that it is a bad thesis. How? Because who would plausibly argue the contrary?
    • Speak your thesis to someone. Pretend you are at a dinner party and someone asks: "Hey, Dwayne, what are you arguing in your economic justice paper?" Can you briefly state what your central claim is? If you can, that's good. It shows you are probably staying on focus. You know what specific things you are trying to change. You also can say it in a few brief sentences to a friend, so you are probably sticking to one topic.
    • After you have finished the writing process, compare the beginning of your paper to the end of your paper. Is the thesis (central claim / argument) the same? Or have you veered off into another argument or discussion? This expanding of one thesis into many theses is very common in people who have a lot of good ideas! Pick just one good one. Stick to it.
    • In general, all writing needs a focus, a theme, a subject. However, we should note that a thesis is not always the same as a focus. We think sometimes of “thesis” meaning “focus” or “general idea.” But often in writing studies, in formal academic argument papers, when we use this word “thesis” we mean formal argument or claim being made. That is, what exactly is the main thing the paper is claiming, or wanting switched? What is the “it should be read, or thought of, or treated this way” that then gives reasons for why things should go one way and not another on a debated topic? Keep this in mind for academic, researched, argument papers.
    • Another way to think of your thesis in an academic, researched, argument paper, is by answering this question: Where is the “things should be this way, the way I say they should be and not that way, the way those others say” in your paper?

    This page titled 5.5: Tips for writing a thesis statement is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Alexandra Glynn, Kelli Hallsten-Erickson & Amy Jo Swing.

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