TQuadded
Breaking the limits.
I've been thinking a lot on my essay structure lately. (English in general lol)
Is it recommended to introduce a thesis, talk about one side of it in the first paragraph, the flip side of it in the second, then discuss my opinion on the third, even if my opinion is saying that the previous things I've discussed are far less important than a much more significant aspect?
e.g. First paragraph = agree with question (X is...)
Second paragraph = disagree with question (However, Y is also...)
Third paragraph = overall opinion (While X and Y are true, Z is more important...)
Should I introduce the argument of the third paragraph in the introduction, or just introduce my argument for the first and second, then leave the third paragraph as a pre-conclusion-surprise opinion/conclusion? Or should I just not do this at all because it is a really dumb idea?
Is it recommended to introduce a thesis, talk about one side of it in the first paragraph, the flip side of it in the second, then discuss my opinion on the third, even if my opinion is saying that the previous things I've discussed are far less important than a much more significant aspect?
e.g. First paragraph = agree with question (X is...)
Second paragraph = disagree with question (However, Y is also...)
Third paragraph = overall opinion (While X and Y are true, Z is more important...)
Should I introduce the argument of the third paragraph in the introduction, or just introduce my argument for the first and second, then leave the third paragraph as a pre-conclusion-surprise opinion/conclusion? Or should I just not do this at all because it is a really dumb idea?