ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Writing Elements and Process Videos 47 videos

Choosing a Topic
1733 Views

Choosing a topic can be extremely difficult—even more difficult than deciding which Ben & Jerry's flavor to try next. No, scratch that. Nothing w...

Escritura no Fácil
246 Views

No busque una palabra negativa. Sino una palabra que pueda ser positiva. Tales son "no se caiga", " no molestes a tus maestros" "no se coma toda...

How to Avoid Repetition in an Essay
940 Views

Reading repetitive essays can bore teachers to death because the essays repeat the same ideas repetitively. You don’t want your teacher to get bo...

See All

What Not to do in an Introduction 32969 Views


Share It!


Description:

This video offers some rules of thumb for writing a good introduction. It covers everything from tone (confidence is key!) to phrases and clichés to avoid (no need to tell the reader you’re writing an essay—they already know that), and where to put (and not to put) that all-important thesis statement.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

What not to do in an Introduction, a la Shmoop

00:08

The introduction is arguably the most important part of the essay. In fact… we’re arguing

00:12

it right now.

00:14

Your teacher is going to have to read the whole thing no matter what, but don’t you

00:18

think they should want to read it?

00:21

Here’s what you should never do in an introduction, to make sure your teacher actually enjoys

00:27

it. They’ll thank you. Maybe with a better grade.

00:33

First of all, you should never not be confident. Always sound sure of yourself.

00:41

If you sound unsure of yourself, by saying something like “in my humble opinion”

00:45

or “if I recall correctly”, no one is going to believe anything you have to say.

00:52

Basically, if your intro can be summed up with a few texting acronyms, it’s a bad

00:57

intro.

00:58

Along those same lines, don’t use phrases like “in this essay” or “the purpose

01:03

of this paper is to…”

01:05

What is following your introduction? Pages and pages of an essay. The fact that you’re

01:11

writing an essay makes it apparent that you’re writing an essay. You don’t need to tell

01:15

anyone this.

01:16

If there’s anything that would grant your essay a one-way ticket to the incinerator,

01:21

it’s referencing the dictionary.

01:23

Avoiding this is simple: Don’t reference the dictionary.

01:27

Just don’t do it.

01:29

Along those lines, it’s also cliché to begin your essay with a quote from someone

01:34

else. Don’t ever being an essay saying something

01:38

like, Dr. Phil says, Sometimes you make the right decision, sometimes you make the decision

01:44

right.

01:45

In fact, don’t quote Dr. Phil ever.

01:48

Your introduction should only be your words.

01:51

Finally, don’t start with your thesis statement.

01:54

That’s like trying to run up the side of the Empire State Building your first day doing

01:59

parkour <<par-coor>>.

02:02

Work your way up to it.

02:04

The best place for your thesis is at the end of your introduction.

02:09

So those are a few things not to do in an introduction.

02:12

Don’t sound unsure of yourself.

02:14

Don’t say that you’re writing an essay.

02:16

Don’t quote the dictionary.

02:17

Actually, don’t quote anyone in your intro.

02:20

And don’t lead off with your thesis statement.

02:23

Following these simple rules will keep your teacher’s blood pressure low, and might

02:29

just keep your grade high.

Related Videos

Wordiness
15168 Views

Want even more deets on wordiness? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Tenses
4974 Views

Want even more deets on tenses? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Semicolons
10246 Views

Want even more deets on semicolons? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Ratio of Asking Questions Versus Giving Answers
718 Views

Asking questions can help spice up an essay. Just make sure you don't get too spicy and forget to answer those questions. You don't want to leave y...

Parallel Structure
16041 Views

This video defines parallel structure and analyzes what makes it powerful (spoiler alert: sticking to a consistent part of speech, like infinitives...