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How to write a thesis statement

How to write a thesis statement

Subject: English

Age range: 14-16

Resource type: Lesson (complete)

Helen Smith's Shop

Last updated

3 October 2023

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how to write a thesis statement gcse literature

Works pupils through how to write a thesis statement for GCSE.

The purpose of this lesson is to build students’ confidence in thesis writing, linking the thesis statement to the body of the essay and encourages students to explore the thought process behind each step. The purpose of this lesson is to ‘demystify’ the writing process. This lesson seeks to explicitly teach one strategy to tackling essay writing.

The slides walk students through a heavily scaffolded, step-by-step process, which, by the end of the lesson students will have practiced the skill of essay/rhetorical writing and will have exercised the thought process that goes into each section.

In the ‘Resources’ section, there are a range of texts that you can choose from which can be used to explore the ‘question’ used to model the process. The questions is ‘How does the writer present attitudes towards love?’. The teacher has the freedom to choose from a range of texts (can be found at the end of this PPT under the ‘RESOURCES’ section). Teachers can choose from: Shelley’s ‘Love’s Philosophy’ Barrett Browning’s ‘Sonnet 29’ Extract from a Guardian newspaper article on the science behind love Extract from the novel ‘War Horse’

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Thoughts about teaching, literature, and teaching literature

Perfecting The Introduction: How to Write Every GCSE English Literature Introduction

how to write a thesis statement gcse literature

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I like to spend a lot of time explicitly teaching, modelling, and rehearsing with students finely crafted introductions. I do this for each of the questions we face as part of AQA GCSE English Literature. By the time of the exam, students should be able to produce a really precise and confident introduction for any question they are asked, which then sets up the rest of the essay. But their ability to do this is the product of a lot of guidance and explicit instruction.

In this post, I’ll take you through each of these introductions, what they look like, and how they work. But, first, a question: Why place such a high premium on writing essay introductions?

Why Focus on Introductions?

1. Introductions create the argumentative groove for the whole essay. As such, they are vital. Here’s how I explain this to students. I ask them to imagine writing an essay is like bowling (bear with me). We want to release the ball with precision and force. It should carry itself along a planned trajectory, not deviating from this track. As it rolls, it should gather momentum until, with a satisfying thwack, it smashes into the pins. If we release too early or if we release in a clumsy fashion, none of this will happen. The ball will skittle off into the gutter. Our introduction is that moment of releasing the ball and if we get it just right then the ball will hurtle towards a strike. The argument we craft is the route that the ball takes, always deliberate, carrying itself to exactly where we want it to land. The introduction, I say, is the crucial moment that determines the future success of our essay before we have even written it.

2. Getting the introduction right with lots of modelling and scaffolding also serves, I’ve found, a psychological function. Exams, understandably, can be very stressful experiences. Getting into the ‘zone’ if you are already stressed can be even more difficult. I’ve found those first 5 minutes of any new essay to be absolutely central to settling students into the rhythm of the exam. Once they start writing often everything becomes a lot easier. So, helping students to take care of that first 5 minutes of writing (in other words the introduction) can have a significant benefit to the rest of the essay. My aim is for each student to have a clear and well-rehearsed schematic for how to approach the introduction for each question so that those first 5 minutes of writing are as seamless and easy as possible. But, of course getting to that point doesn’t happen by accident or automatically.

3. Finally, there is another psychological benefit, but this time to the examiner. A typical examiner might have 300 scripts to mark in one examination cycle, which, if AQA, means 600 essays for Paper 1 or, if Paper 2, 900 essays. That’s a lot of essays! As such, they are incentivised to mark quickly. The introduction of any essay is going to shape their initial view of the kind of essay they are reading. Of course, they’ll continue to read and form a judgement about the whole piece, but, nonetheless, the introduction is going to help to establish an anticipated horizon of likelihood. If the introduction is amazing an assumption will be made they are reading a good essay. The rest of the essay now just needs to justify that first impression. However, if it’s a bad introduction the rest of the essay has a uphill battle of dislodging the first impression. Up hill is harder than down hill. We want down hill. We want the examiner to arrive at the end of the introduction thinking this is an excellent essay and then the essay can flow forwards from that initial presumption.

So there we have it: why spending time really rehearsing the introduction can pay dividends. But, what do they actually look like?

An Inspector Calls or The Modern Text

For this question, I follow a tripartite structure that looks like this:

1. All the characters are constructs that serve a function

2. How so, related to the question?

3. The text warns/challenges/subverts/attacks/critiques, as relevant to the question

I’ve yet to find a question where this basic structure doesn’t work perfectly.

Here’s an example:

How does Priestley explore the importance of social class in An Inspector Calls?

When considering the ways in which Priestley explores the importance of social class in An Inspector Calls, it is important first of all to stress all characters within the play are dramatic vehicles, representing the damage entranced social divisions can bring about. Mrs Birling, for example, is used to represents the kind of heinous class prejudice that might have been typical of Edwardian society whilst the Inspector, Priestley’s mouthpiece, embodies an emphatic rejection of this mentality. In this, Priestley seeks to pit one ideology against another, underlining the urgent need for equity and the dismantling of social barriers.

Whilst, as we’ll see in a moment, I do have other basic structures for the other questions, this one can also be used for most of the other questions, or at least the Shakespeare play and the nineteenth-century novel. It offers a really flexible and robust opening to any essay and can be pretty much endlessly recycled.

The Anthology Poetry

Again, we follow a tripartite structure, which looks like this:

1. Specify the chosen poem

2. Thematic similarity

3. Thematic difference

This is very straightforward but works excellently: name the second poem and then bring them together to offer one point of thematic similarity and one point of thematic difference.

Compare how poets present attitudes towards a broken relationship in Neutral Tones and one other poem

When considering how Hardy presents a broken relationship in Neutral Tones one also immediately think of Sheers’ Winter Swans. Both poems depict the deep pain that a broken relationship can cause, reflecting on the difficulties and emotional hardship this can create. However, whilst Hardy’s poem maintains a bitter tone throughout, Sheers concludes his with a sense of reconciliation, suggesting a broken relationship can be overcome.

The key thing here, I feel is to include no language analysis and to maintain a purely thematic overview. This instantly places the essay in the realm of the conceptual, offering an idea or point of view that will then help to drive the analysis forward.

Unseen Poetry

This one is a little bit cheating to include, since it doesn’t, by design, really have an introduction. Or, rather the introduction is a single sentence beginning with ‘Thematically speaking…’.

Here’s what it looks like in answer to this question about Island Man, how does the poet present the speaker’s feelings about home:

Thematically speaking, the poet presents the speaker’s feelings about his home as a vehicle through which to explore the way in which it shapes one’s identity and its deep emotional significance.

For this question, I used to recommend to students they they just dive straight in with an analysis of the poem. However, what I noticied is that the ensuing analysis seemed unmoored. It didn’t have any thematic direction. So, I tried to fix this by asking students to begin by explicitly addressing in the opening sentence their conceptual stance in regards to the question. This then provides a cue for the analysis itself, helping to ensure it is pinned to a wider understanding of the text.

The ‘thematically speaking’ element doesn’t really need to be there to achieve this, but it offers a useful prompt to help remind students the point of their introductory sentence is to root their response and subsequent analysis within a consideration of bigger ideas. Like all good sentence stems, it helps to cue up the thinking that is about to take place.

Macbeth and the Nineteenth-Century Novel

I’ve included these in the same section because I use exactly the same format for both introductions, given they both involve responding to an extract.

First, it’s useful to understand how I ask students to think about this question more generally. I explain whatever extract they’re given will be in some manner an important moment in the play. We need to think about this moment not in isolation but as a kind of pivot onto which the wider play, in some fashion, balances. We might think about how events in the play lead up to this moment or how subsequent events develop. But, the extract becomes a way into the play as a whole.

Here’s a graphic representation of this same idea that I use with when explaining this:

how to write a thesis statement gcse literature

With this in mind, I introduction I advocate follows this format:

1. Express that the given extract is a pivotal moment within the wider play

2. How so? Does it instigate a chain of events within the play or is it the culmination of a chain of events?

3. How is this chain of events relevant to the question being posed?

And, here’s an example from Macbeth:

When considering how Shakespeare presents the character of Macbeth as ambitious one recognises this extract is a pivotal moment in the play. This is largely because the scene is the culmination of a chain of events in which Macbeth has increasingly displayed his almost aggressive ambition, leading to the murder of Banquo. Here, Macbeth is responding to the sight of Banquo at the banquet, suggestive of the violent consequences of his ambition and how it will haunt him.

This is a great way not only to write an introduction but also, more broadly, to encourage students to think about the relationship between the extract and the wider text for this kind of question.

I should also add, though, that the AIC style introduction does still work very well for this question too. And so if, for whatever reason, we wanted to avoid the chain of events style introduction, students could very easily repurpose the AIC one with still excellent results.

I suppose for a post on the introduction I could just leave it there. Who cares about conclusions, anyway?! Well, there is maybe ever so slightly some truth to this. Realistically, in the midst of a time-pressured and tiring exam, the conclusion will naturally get less attention. It also suffers from the law of diminishing returns where, in all likelihood, your mark has been more or less decided before we arrive at the conclusion. It probably isn’t going to add much. So, I do definitely spend less time rehearsing the conclusion.

Still, like now, there needs to be something. As a personal stylistic quirk, I suggest students conclude with the word ‘fundamentally’ (probably to do with that satisfying thwack I’m hoping to see) and that they cycle back to the initial claim they made. This will usually involve some variance of reiterating what the text is doing, whether warning, celebrating, challenging, admonishing, and so on.

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3 thoughts on “ perfecting the introduction: how to write every gcse english literature introduction ”.

  • Pingback: Unseen poetry, sonnets, and important knowledge – Passing It On

thank you so much for making this it ha helped me so much your structure is incredible x

This is unbelievably helpful, thank you. My class are really struggling to create lines of argument, so providing them a structure really helps.

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IMAGES

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COMMENTS

  1. Structuring the Essay

    As Paper 1 requires you to answer two questions in 1hr 45min, you have 52 and a half minutes to plan, write and check your 19th-century novel essay. A good rule of thumb is to spend: 7 minutes analysing the question and the extract. 7-10 minutes of planning. 30-35 minutes of writing.

  2. How to Write a Thesis Statement (Gcse English Literature)

    Use this video to help you improve the thesis statements that you write for your GCSE English literature essays.The sample sentences that you use for many di...

  3. How to Write a GCSE English Literature Essay

    Underline the key words of the question. Annotate the exam paper (this is especially great if you are answering an essay question that also includes an extract) Establish your own argument, or viewpoint, based on the key words of the question. Write down your overarching argument (this is often called a "thesis statement") at the top of ...

  4. Structuring the Essay

    2. Identify the keywords of the question: The key words are the focus of the question: the specific themes, ideas or characters the examiners want you to focus on. For the above question, the key words of the question are "how Russell presents the importance of friendship". This is the theme the examiners want you to explore in your essay.

  5. PDF How to plan and write a top mark essay

    Main Body. There should be at least 3 paragraphs which make up the main body of your essay . You could... Examine relationships between characters (conflict between Mr Birling & the Inspector and class, Eva & Gerald's relationship and gender) Examine a specific character (Sheila and social mobility/gender, Eva the fallen woman/working class)

  6. How to Write a Thesis Statement

    Step 2: Write your initial answer. After some initial research, you can formulate a tentative answer to this question. At this stage it can be simple, and it should guide the research process and writing process. The internet has had more of a positive than a negative effect on education.

  7. How To Write The PERFECT Thesis Statement For Any GCSE ...

    Join my £10 GCSE 2024 Exams Masterclass. Enter Your GCSE Exams Feeling CONFIDENT & READY! https://www.firstratetutors.com/gcse-classes Check out our 'Ultimat...

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  9. PDF Guide to Paper 2

    Guide to Paper 2 - AQA English Literature GCSE. The written exam takes 2 hours and 15 minutes in total and is worth 60% of your entire English Literature GCSE. Assessment objectives (AOs) are the same across all GCSE English Literature exam boards , they are used by the examiner to mark and evaluate how well you have constructed your essay.

  10. How to write a thesis statement (with examples)

    What your thesis statement includes is determined by three things: 1. The subject and topic of the essay. 2. The purpose of the essay. 3. The length of the essay. Let's examine each of those in more detail to see how they can help us refine our thesis statement.

  11. Step by step guide to writing an AQA GCSE Literature essay

    Step by step guide to writing an AQA GCSE Literature essay. This collection of posters can be used as a display or as a work booklet. It guides them through how to write thesis statement, how to write topic sentences, how to choose the best quotations and how to write a conclusion. It then gives them an opportunity to have a scaffolded go at ...

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    pptx, 178.26 KB. A pupil friendly, step by step, English Literature essay planning and writing guide. These resources provide a framework to enable learners to write comprehensive and well structured essays. There are two resources: Document. Explains how to plan and write a literature essay from scratch. There are also images of how students ...

  13. How to write a thesis statement

    File previews. pptx, 826.38 KB. Works pupils through how to write a thesis statement for GCSE. The purpose of this lesson is to build students' confidence in thesis writing, linking the thesis statement to the body of the essay and encourages students to explore the thought process behind each step. The purpose of this lesson is to ...

  14. Essay plan

    In an essay response for poetry, your plan is likely to contain the elements you see in this table: Brief outline of what you intend to include. Overview of the poem (s) which are specific to the ...

  15. Perfecting The Introduction: How to Write Every GCSE English Literature

    1. Introductions create the argumentative groove for the whole essay. As such, they are vital. Here's how I explain this to students. I ask them to imagine writing an essay is like bowling (bear with me). We want to release the ball with precision and force.

  16. How to answer a 'Macbeth' question

    Chunk structure: treat the extract as a chunk and other parts of the play as another chunk. Introduction: outline your thesis (e.g. overall argument) in a few sentences. Analysis paragraph 1: paragraph on the extract Analysis paragraph 2: paragraph on the rest of the play, generally with one of the following approaches:. a) Discussion of a similar/contrasting presentation of the theme

  17. Structuring an essay

    GCSE; WJEC; Responding to a fiction text - WJEC Structuring an essay - Writing the main body. In an extended response essay to a fiction text you can talk about character, setting, themes and ...

  18. Structuring the Essay

    2. Identify the key words of the question. The key words are the focus of the question: the specific themes or ideas the examiners want you to focus on. For the above question, the key words of the question are "ideas about power and control". This is the theme the examiners want you to explore in your essay.

  19. Structuring the Shakespeare Essay

    An introduction with a thesis statement; A number of paragraphs (three is ideal!), each covering a separate point. It's a great idea to start each paragraph with a topic sentence A conclusion; Introduction. Your introduction should aim to answer the question - clearly and briefly; The best way to do this is to include a thesis statement

  20. Macbeth Study: Writing a thesis statement and intro paragraph

    After you've figured out your anchor word or phrase, begin to examine the question. In this video, I'm demonstrating a way of engaging with the question and...

  21. Model Answers

    Revision notes on Model Answers for the AQA GCSE English Literature syllabus, written by the English Literature experts at Save My Exams. ... The introduction is in the form of a thesis statement; It includes a central argument based on my own opinions; ... By choosing to write his poem in the form of a dramatic monologue, and with an invented ...

  22. How to write an essay for KS3 English students

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  23. Approaching the Unseen Poetry Question

    An introduction with a thesis statement; A number of paragraphs (three is ideal!), each covering a separate point. It's a great idea to start each paragraph with a topic sentence; A conclusion; Introduction. Your introduction should aim to clearly, and briefly, answer the question; The best way to do this is to include a thesis statement