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Logical grouping and sequencing
Arranging related ideas together and ordering them so a reader can follow the essay’s reasoning step by step.
Clear paragraph job
The principle that each paragraph should have one distinct purpose, such as stating a reason, giving an example, or addressing a counterargument.
Momentum
The sense that an essay’s ideas build forward in a purposeful order instead of feeling like a random list of points.
Scatter
An organizational problem in which a writer introduces an idea, drops it, and returns to it later, forcing the reader to hold unfinished thoughts.
Blend
An organizational problem in which multiple main ideas are crammed into one paragraph, causing the paragraph to lose clear focus.
Thesis
The writer’s main claim or perspective, ideally stated with a reason, condition, or guiding principle that controls the essay.
Integrated approach
A method of handling other perspectives by discussing them within body paragraphs rather than in one separate comparison paragraph.
Dedicated paragraph approach
A method of handling other perspectives by using one paragraph mainly to compare or respond to one or more perspectives.
Effective introduction
An opening that briefly frames the issue, clearly states the thesis, and may preview the main reasons of the essay.
Roadmap
A brief forecast in the introduction that hints at the main categories or reasons the essay will develop.
Effective conclusion
A closing that restates the thesis in fresh language, synthesizes key ideas, shows significance, and gives the essay closure.
Synthesis
Combining the main points of an argument into a broader, clearer takeaway rather than merely repeating earlier sentences.
Closure
The feeling that an essay has reached a logical and complete endpoint instead of stopping abruptly.
Transitions
Words, phrases, or sentence structures that clarify the logical relationship between ideas, such as contrast, cause, example, or continuation.
Sentence-level transitions
Small connections within a paragraph, such as 'for example' or 'as a result,' that link nearby ideas clearly.
Paragraph-level transitions
Bridges between paragraphs that connect the previous idea to the new one and signal the relationship between them.
Qualification
A transition or reasoning move that refines a claim by showing limits or conditions, such as 'this is true, but only if…'
Unity
The quality of an essay in which every part supports one controlling idea or thesis.
Coherence
The quality of an essay that makes it feel connected and easy to follow from beginning to end.
Controlling idea
The central perspective or principle that guides what the writer includes, emphasizes, and connects throughout the essay.
Topic sentence
A sentence, usually at the start of a paragraph, that states the paragraph’s main point and links it to the thesis.
Strategic repetition
The purposeful reuse of key terms or concepts to keep the essay’s main thread visible and strengthen coherence.
Argument thread
A key idea deliberately carried through multiple paragraphs so the essay feels like one continuous argument.
Thesis drift
A problem in which the essay gradually shifts away from its original position, leaving the reader unsure of the writer’s stance.
Perspective overload
An organizational weakness in which too much time is spent summarizing the provided perspectives, making the writer’s own argument thin or unclear.