Title: Creating Thesis Statements and Abstracts
1Creating Thesis Statements and Abstracts
Presented byRIT Academic Support Center
2Thesis Statements
Creating Thesis Statements
3Purpose
A thesis statement prepares readers to listen to
the ideas, explanations, and evidence that
develop the thesis statement.
4Purpose (cont.)
- Thesis statements provide one or more of the
following - Preview and roadmap
- Expectation and interpretation
- Purpose and claim
- Answer (or question)
- Stated conclusion based on evidence
- Anticipated and disproved counter-arguments
5A Thesis Statement Is (and is Not) . . .
6Location, Sentence Type, and Voice
- A thesis statement
- is usually located at the end of the first
paragraph of a paper. - is one declarative sentence (and in the active
voice). - avoids the first person (e.g., I believe, in my
opinion).
7Example
Fact or observation Society uses many
computers. Thesis Statement Society is
losing their ability to communicate on a personal
level due to their reliance on computers. For
other examples, refer to http//leo.stcloudstate.
edu/acadwrite/thesistatement.html
8Check Your Understanding
- Choose the Best Research Thesis
- http//www.esc.edu/esconline/across_esc/writerscom
plex.nsf/3cc42a422514347a8525671d0049f395/11c346d8
77aed85a852569c300671b2b?OpenDocument
9Checklist for Revising Thesis Statements
- Is your thesis statement
- specific (tells what you want readers to
understand, know, believe)? - Does it pass the so-what" test?
- Does it pass the how-and-why test?
- manageable (precise, limited)?
- interesting?
10Check Your Understanding
- Activity Check the strength of your existing
thesis statements. - Form groups of three students.
- Share your thesis statements.
- Review the checklist and recommend changes to
each others statements. - Select one thesis statement from each group and
write the original and the revised statement on
the white board. - Explain your changes.
11Abstracts
Creating Abstracts
12Thought-provoking Questions
- How many of these questions can you answer
- Why do authors create abstracts?
- What is your goal when you read an abstract?
- How do you determine if an abstract is written
well? - How would you go about writing an abstract?
- When (in the writing process) do you write the
abstract?
13 Purpose
- Abstracts
- express the main claim and argument of a paper.
- highlight or review content and scope of the
writing. - provide a pre-reading outline of key points.
- help readers decide if they should read an entire
article.
14Requirement
- Abstracts are required when
- Submitting articles to journals
- Applying for research grants
- Writing a book proposal (and individual chapter
proposals) - Completing an MA or Ph.D. dissertation thesis
- Writing a proposal for a conference paper
- Fulfilling an assignment requirement
15Types
- Descriptive abstracts
- introduce the subject to readers, who must then
read the content. - include purpose, methods, and scope.
- do not provide results, conclusions, or
recommendations. - are very short (usually under 100 words).
16Types (cont.)
- Informative abstracts
- communicate specific information.
- include purpose, methods, and scope.
- provide results, conclusions, and
recommendations. - are short (usually 10 or less of the length of
the original piece).
17Types (cont.)
- Informative abstracts (cont.)
- allow readers to decide whether they want to read
the report, article, or paper. - summarize key information from each main section.
- phrase information in a dense, compact way (using
sentences that are longer than normal that are
filled with information and key statistical
detail).
18Main Elements
- Each main element contains one or two sentences
for each of the following - Background places work in context
- Aims gives purpose of work
- Method(s) explains what was done
- Results indicates main findings (absolutely
essential) - Conclusions gives most important consequence of
work (telling what results mean)
19Questions Answered
- An abstract answers the following questions
- Why did you do this study or project?
- What did you do, and how?
- What did you find?
- What do your findings mean?
20Qualities
- Well-written abstracts
- use paragraphs that are concise and able to stand
alone. - use an introduction/body/conclusion structure
that presents the background, aims, methods,
results, and conclusions (in that order). - strictly follow the chronology of the content.
21Qualities (cont.)
- Well-written abstracts
- provide logical connections between information
included. - add no new information simply summarize the
report. - is understandable to a wide audience.
- oftentimes use passive verbs to downplay the
author and emphasize the information.
22What to Avoid
- Since abstracts should be about the research,
(and not the writing), do not - begin sentences with "it is suggested that
(believed that, felt that, or similar). - end sentences with "is described (reported,
analyzed, or similar). - explain the sections or parts of the paper.
- refer to information that is not in the document.
23Methods
- The first method for creating an abstract is cut
and paste - Read through the entire paper.
- Cut and paste sentences that particularly capture
key passages. - Edit as needed.
24Methods
- The second method for creating an abstract is
reverse outline - Make an outline of the paper to serve as a rough
draft of your abstract. - Write down the one main idea that is in each
paragraph. - Group the main ideas of each section of the paper
into a single sentence. - Edit as needed.
25Technique
- To improve your skill of writing good abstracts
- Read a variety of abstracts.
- Read the associated articles.
- Select the best ones -- where the abstract makes
the article easier to read. - Identify how the authors do it.
26Checklist for Well-written Abstract
- Does your abstract
- state your thesis and argument clearly in a few
sentences? - allow someone who doesn't know the subject be
able to understand the main idea? - What else would you add to this list?
27Check Your Understanding
- How many of these thought-provoking questions can
you answer now - Why do authors create abstracts?
- What is your goal when you read an abstract?
- How do you determine if an abstract is written
well? - How would you go about writing an abstract?
- When do you write the abstract?
28Resources
- Contents adapted from the following websites
(which are excellent resources for further
study) - http//owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/545/01/
- http//www.sdst.org/shs/library/thesis.html
- http//www.olemiss.edu/depts/writing_center/grabst
ract.html - http//writing.colostate.edu/guides/documents/abst
ract/pop2b.cfm - http//www.unc.edu/depts/wcweb/handouts/abstracts.
html