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ELA 4: Paragraph Writing 443 Views
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Description:
Today we're going to learn about paragraph hamburgers. They're vegan, calorie-free...and also not food. Sorry to get your hopes up.
Transcript
- 00:04
[Coop and Dino singing]
- 00:13
We know that learning about grammar and sentence structure and paragraphs and all things English… [Teacher pointing to chalkboard]
- 00:17
can get a little bit boring.
- 00:19
So we can only imagine your excitement to hear that we're going to be discussing hamburgers today!
- 00:24
Paragraph Hamburgers! [Teacher holding a dish with a hamburger]
Full Transcript
- 00:26
Okay, that might have been misleading. Sorry if we got your hopes up.
- 00:30
Imagine we were given a bunch of ingredients, like a bun, a patty, some lettuce, a slice
- 00:35
of tomato, and a few condiments. [Woman holding board of ingredients]
- 00:37
If no one ever showed us what a burger looked like or how to make one, we’d have no idea
- 00:40
what to do, and might end up with some disastrous results.
- 00:44
The same can be said about writing a paragraph: it's easy to do, but only once we’ve been [Car drives up to fast food window]
- 00:48
taught how to do it.
- 00:50
To start with, we need a topic sentence. We can think of this as the top bun, ready to
- 00:55
hold everything else together.
- 00:56
The topic sentence is where we state what our paragraph is all about. [Coop teaching about topic sentences]
- 01:00
It helps to organize our ideas,
- 01:02
and we always want everything else in the paragraph to be related to this topic sentence.
- 01:06
So, if we were writing a paragraph about how we think that every house in America should
- 01:10
be made of chocolate, our topic sentence might look something like this: [Man walks up to chocolate house]
- 01:14
“Americans should build their houses out of chocolate.”
- 01:17
Concise and to the point. Not to mention a truly awful idea. But an idea nonetheless. [Man chewing side of a chocolate house]
- 01:22
After we have our bun assembled, we need to add the patty and condiments.
- 01:26
Think of these different condiments as our supporting details.
- 01:29
Remember, all of our supporting details need to refer back to our original topic sentence.
- 01:33
So our details might look something like this:
- 01:35
Detail #1: Chocolate is delicious and looks beautiful, too.
- 01:40
Detail #2: Chocolate can be sculpted into any shape imaginable.
- 01:44
Detail #3: No one would ever go hungry if every house was made of chocolate.
- 01:48
Finally comes the bottom bun, which supports everything in the middle. [Bottom bun lands on plate]
- 01:52
This bottom bun in our paragraph is the concluding sentence.
- 01:55
This concluding sentence will be sort of similar to our topic sentence, but should aim to summarize [Dino discussing concluding sentences]
- 01:59
everything we've said in the paragraph in one clearly worded statement.
- 02:02
In this case, our concluding sentence could look like this:
- 02:05
“For these reasons, it's a no-brainer that America would be a better place if we used
- 02:08
chocolate to build our homes.”
- 02:10
So there you have it: the “burger” method to writing a paragraph.
- 02:13
Start with a topic sentence that explains your paragraph, follow it up with several [Arrows pointing to ingredients for paragraph and a burger]
- 02:16
details that support your topic sentence, and then make a concluding statement that
- 02:20
re-states the topic sentence in a new way.
- 02:25
But please, we beg you, don’t build yourself a chocolate house.
- 02:28
On the first day of summer, you’ll thank us. [Man stood outside a melting chocolate house]
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