• Underline all the sentences that serve to introduce the story.
• Highlight the thesis.
(Student sample 1) Lord of the Flies by William Golding is a suspenseful book about a group of boys that crashes on a deserted island during a war. In Lord of the Flies, William Golding may or may not be trying to show us a comparison between some of the objects and characters to something or someone else. There are many different symbols in the book including the characters and objects that are talked about in the novel. Ralph, Jack, and Simon symbolize different things. Golding uses Ralph, Jack, and Simon as different traits of human nature. • Weaknesses of this introduction
• Strengths of this introduction:
• Topics of the three body paragraphs:
(Student sample 2) Lord of the Flies by William Golding is about a bunch of 12-year old boys who battle between savagery and civilization. The boys are stuck on an island and are forced to get along and compromise on decisions without adults. The major theme of Lord of the Flies is savagery vs. civilization. Golding uses three symbols to represent this theme: the beast, which represents internal evil; the conch, which represents authority; and the fire, which represents life. • Weaknesses of this introduction:
• Strengths of this introduction:
• Topics of the three body paragraphs:
(Student sample 3) Lord of the Flies by William Golding depicts young boys and how they can turn savage. The novel takes place on a stranded island that no one has ever heard of. The young boys on the island have no way to be rescued. Ralph is one of the older boys on the island, and elected leader. Jack is also older; he is a hunter and always wants things his way. Simon is one of the younger boys; he looks up to the older ones and always helps out. Simon, Jack, and Ralph all show the theme of good versus evil. The writing in Lord of the Flies effectively shows how Simon represents saintliness, Jack represents evil, and Ralph represents civilization. • Weaknesses of this introduction:
The Essay on Lord Of The Flies Piggy Ralph Jack
Lord Of The Flies is possibly one of the most complex novels of the twentieth century. This complexity and depth is evident when the characters are compared to the psychological teachings of Freud. The book shows examples of this psyche in the characters Jack, Piggy and Ralph and how they change during their time on the island. Towards the end of the eighth chapter it became very apparent that ...
• Strengths of this introduction:
• Topics of the three body paragraphs:
Directions: Read the following teacher models. Answer the questions that follow. An Excellent Model
(Teacher sample) Only a man who had experienced two world wars could produce Lord of the Flies, a dark story about man’s potential for evil. William Golding, a child of World War I, constructed a novel about war from an adolescent’s perspective. The young boys’ war takes both an internal and an external form as they struggle against each other and their evil natures. Golding employs symbolism to illustrate the boys’ conflict and its connection to the larger struggle of good versus evil. He uses several symbols to demonstrate how man, when removed from civilization, succumbs to the evil lying dormant inside his heart. Golding explores this idea through the face paint, which symbolizes a loss of identity to savagery; the island, which represents a paradise squandered; and the “Lord of the Flies,” which signifies the evil within man’s heart. An Excellent Model
(Teacher Sample) Taking cues from Treasure Island and other adventure stories that draw from the deserted island motif, William Golding, in Lord of the Flies, tells the story of young British boys whose plane crashes on an uninhabited island in the Pacific Ocean during a fictional atomic war. In removing these boys from civilization, Golding creates a world in which they are forced to question established societal standards of right and wrong. As their sense of morality and civility fade along with their hope of being rescued, many of the boys become more and more savage. Although the plot involves fierce hunting, uncontrollable fire, and even murder, the boys’ story is not the pull of Golding’s novel; instead the real draw is his exploration of the darkness of man’s true nature and the conflict between man’s civility and the evil within. Golding examines man’s inherent need for order and civilization through the characters of Piggy, who represents man’s civilized rationality; Ralph, who symbolizes man’s ultimate struggle with savagery; and Roger, who represents a total loss of civility.
The Essay on Lord Of The Flies "Is Man Inherently Evil?"
Is man inherently evil? Many people have different answers to this question some do not believe that there is such a thing as good or evil. What is good and evil? Is evil a part of every human being from the moment he is on this planet? I think that man himself chooses in which direction to go to and the environment influences his or her decisions. Many think that you are not inherently evil or ...
▪ What makes this introduction effective? Be specific.
▪ What strategy does the writer use to grab the reader’s attention?
▪ What might the topic sentence be for the first body paragraph?
▪ What is one element of this paragraph that you will try to imitate in your own introduction?
Now write your own carefully crafted introduction. Check your rubric to make sure you have included all of the necessary components of an introduction.
Consider:
hook, plot, thesis, flow, clarity, and word choice
(informal versus formal)
Consider:
hook, plot, thesis, flow, clarity, and word choice (informal versus formal)
Consider:
hook, plot, thesis, flow, clarity, and word choice
(informal versus formal)
Turn in this entire packet before you leave today. This is a grade!