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9.2 Spotting the Thesis in Essay Prompts

Identifying the thesis in a writing prompt is the first step toward crafting a compelling analysis, counterargument, or agreement piece. Use these strategies:

Step #1. Isolate the Action command implicit in the thesis statement

  • Look for directive verbs: argue, evaluate, justify, analyze, defend, propose. These signal the type of response expected.

Step #2. Find the Debatable Focus

  • Prompts often center on issues with multiple viewpoints.
  • Keywords like “should”, “must”, and “impact”, indicate controversy.
  • Consider that a thesis always revolves around a claim you could reasonably agree or disagree with. Look for phrases that suggest tension or debate, like “to what extent,” “should,” “is it justified,” or “is effective.”

Step #3. Break down the Purpose and the Subject

  • Purpose: Does the author want to persuade, inform, or compare?
  • Subject: What concept, policy, or trend is under discussion?
  • Ask yourself: “What is the central idea that the essay is built around? What does the prompt want me to prove or challenge?”

Step #4. Temporarily convert the thesis into a Yes/No Question

Example:

  • Prompt: Should college tuition be free?
  • Question: Should governments fund universal college education?

Step #5. Then rephrase the issue as a Debatable Statement

Example: College education should be government-funded to improve social equity and economic growth.

Step #6. Watch the text for Implied claims and take note of them separately

  • Example Prompt: Discuss the impact of social media on teen mental health
  • Implied claim: Social media significantly affects teen mental health.

Step #7. Scan the text to establish its scope

  • Note any limits: of time, of population, of region, of ethnicity, of gender, of belief.
  • Your counter-potential counter-arguments or thesis must stay within the established bounds.

How Are Arguments Built?

Let’s use the following sequence for dissecting arguments: Claim–Evidence–Reasoning. Understanding how arguments are built will help us evaluate their strength.

Claim – The Core Statement

  • What is the author trying to prove?
  • What is the thesis statement, or what are the topic sentences?

Evidence – The Support System

  • Facts, statistics, expert opinions, anecdotes.
  • Ask yourself: Are they credible? Relevant? Varied?

Reasoning – The Logical Bridge

  • How does the evidence support the claim?
  • Watch for transitions like “this shows that…” or “therefore…”.