Brainstorm: making a list of all of your ideas about a topic and then finding patterns of organization and the ideas you want to develop
Concluding sentence: the final idea in a paragraph that effectively ends the discussion
Organization: focuses, limits, or controls the topic to make it more specific (ex. sandwiches > the best type of sandwich)
Drafted writing: the focus is on the process of writing, meaning that the writer will make many different versions of the writing in order to improve it
Organization: a group of paragraphs connected to the same topic and organized to present a big idea by presenting it in detail
Evaluate: to look at something and decide if it is good or if it needs to change
Feedback: ideas someone gives for how to improve your writing after they finish reading it
Formatting: how you organize the words on the page, there are specific rules for formatting an essay in English (indentations, 12 point font, 1 inch margins, etc)
Hook: the first sentence in an essay that is used to make the reader interested and continue to read
Outline: the basic organization of the main idea and most important details and where they will be in the essay, this helps you to keep control of your essay
Paragraph: a group of sentences that are all connected by one topic and organized clearly, typically includes a topic sentence, supporting sentence, and concluding sentence
Restate: to say the same idea in a different way
Supporting sentence: follow the topic sentence and give reasons, examples, and explanations that explain it in more detail
Timed writing: the focus is on the what a writer can create with a time limit and without access to additional help
Topic sentence: the main idea for a paragraph, often the first sentence