Failing to Prepare is Preparing to Fail: Essay Pre-Writing Steps
ET Phone Home: Analyzing The Documents
Let's Get It Started in Here: Intro Paragraphs
Get Bodied: Body Paragraphs
What's Left: Conclusion Paragraphs and Before You Plan
100

This is the first step to follow as soon as you receive your Benchmark packet.

Write your name!

100

The tool we use to analyze every document in the Benchmark packet is called this.

Every Text, Every Time.

100

The intro paragraph should start with this.

Context.

100

All body paragraphs should begin with this.

A claim.

100

The conclusion of a historical essay should do this.

Sum up/restate your claims.
200

If there are any words or phrases you don't recognize in the Big Question, the second step to follow is to try to find their meaning using these.

Context Clues

200
The first step of Every Text, Every Time is called "Pre-read." In this step, we analyze these things.

All background information including Source, Note, and any other information provided outside of the documents themselves.

200

The intro paragraph should end with this.

Thesis Statement.

200

The claim in a body paragraph should be backed up by at least 2 of these.

Cited pieces of evidence (quotes or paraphrases).

200

To help analyze the Background Essay, you should create these (based on the historical topic(s) in the Big Question) during Step 4 of pre-writing.

4-5 background questions

300

After you have found the meaning of any unknown words in the Big Question, the third prewriting step to follow is to do this.

Rewrite the question in your own words.

300

The first time we read any document, we are looking for this (and we should always write it down at the bottom of the document).

The main idea of the document.

300

A thesis statement should be this long.

One sentence.

300

All evidence in a body paragraph must be followed by this.

An explanation of how the evidence proves the claim.

300

After you are done analyzing all documents in the Benchmark Packet, one of the last 2 steps before you plan out your essay is to do this.

Final Bucketing/Chickenfoot.

400

The Background Essay exists to provide this for your essay.

Context/Background Info

400

The second time we read any document, we are reading to do this.

Answer the Big Question in the form of a Claim.
400

The part of the thesis statement that restates the question is called this.

The thesis.

400

The claims in the body paragraphs should be in the same order as they are here.

In the thesis statement.

400

Your labels for your final buckets should go under the buckets. This is what goes inside them.

The letters of the documents that match each bucket (for evidence).

500

2-Part Answer: After you have followed all other pre-writing steps (1-4), this is the last step to follow before analyzing the documents. This step is important to start thinking about these.

Pre-bucketing/Claims

500

When we read any document the second time, our claim should go in one of these (underneath the document).

A bucket

500

The number of claims (answers to the Big Question) in a thesis statement should match this number.

The number of body paragraphs in the essay.

500

2-part answer: Evidence in body paragraphs can be in the form of either this or this but must ALWAYS be cited.

Quotes or paraphrases.

500

2-Part Answer: The Chickenfoot is the last step before planning your essay. The Chickenfoot helps you do this and the number of toes on the foot match this number.

Plan your thesis/the number of claims or body paragraphs in the essay.