Think about the audience: what do
your readers know about the topic?
The opening part of the essay is introductions which make
the readers know about your topic and what you want to discuss in the essay.
Not exact matches
Reblogged this on usmcvball and commented: Some «off -
topic» stuff, for those
readers who want to
know more
about why I say what I say... CM
I have 200,000
readers a month and can not reply in length to every person who wants to
know what I believe
about a particular
topic.
Well, you
know you have those of us who are regular
readers and would miss your writing, but maybe you can think
about just posting when a
topic really excites you in some way, and not feel obligated to write otherwise.
One
reader named Tammy Molnar appreciated «How to Date Like a Grown - Up» for its candid discussion of personal dating
topics, adding, «The author clearly
knows what she's talking
about.»
«Kids who, on standard reading tests, show themselves to be poor
readers, when you give them a text that's on a
topic they happen to
know a whole lot
about, they suddenly look like terrific
readers.»
If a
reader knows much
about a
topic, his / her reading comprehension rises.
If the student
knows a lot
about the
topic, then factors like rare vocabulary (which isn't rare to the
reader with the relevant knowledge) and complex sentence structure are of little import.
In one famous experiment, kids who were «poor
readers» and
knew a lot
about baseball could read better than kids who were «good
readers» but
knew little
about the sport — when the
topic was baseball.
It should be well formulated in the sense that if the
reader opted to ignore the background part, he or she would nicely
know one specific
topic of discussion, the claim
about the
topic and the defending reasons why you chose the stated claims.
If you do not
know much
about your
topic, how you can present it the way you want your
readers to understand it.
In addition, our writers want you to
know that
topic sentences are usually placed in the beginning of the paragraph in order to let your
reader know what this part is going to be
about.
Even if you've choose the
topic you like, but you understand that probably you can not inform your
reader properly, reject it
no matter how strongly you might feel
about it.
The beginning makes your
readers know what the essay is
about, the main
topic of it.
Long - time
readers of this blog already
know my thoughts on this
topic because I have blogged
about it numerous times (the related posts are listed at the bottom of this post).
There must be such a huge
reader base that a good portion probably doesn't
know too much
about investing (from reading the comments), but I bet they sure
know a lot
about frugality (whole separate
topic)!
Regardless of the legal
topic, you will still
know more
about it than your lay
readers.
He is also an avid
reader, who can while away hours reading and
knowing about the latest gadgets and tech, whilst offering views and opinions on these
topics.
Many
readers (including colleagues) will
know the story behind it all — and there is a story
about that
topic on the site as well.