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Writing Organization Study Guide: Pre-GED Language Arts, Writing (page 3)

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Support

When applied to writing, support refers to all the information in a paragraph that supports the main point, or topic sentence. Once you're comfortable with identifying the topic sentence of a paragraph, the support will be easy to find.

Support can refer to many different kinds of information. It can include examples that help prove the topic sentence or thesis statement, such as:

  • facts (such as statistics or dates)
  • references to other works
  • quotes from credible sources
  • personal stories

Support can also include sentences that clarify, develop, or respond to information stated in the examples. Take a look at the following short paragraph, and see if you can pick out which sentence is the topic sentence and which sentences are support.

(1) Cell phones are a waste of money. (2) My cell phone bill totaled over $1,200 last year. (3) That's more than three times what a land line would have cost!

Since the main idea of this paragraph is that cell phones are a waste of money, sentence (1) must be the topic sentence. That means sentences (2) and (3) are support.

Here's another example we've seen before:

(1) Janet is a terrible girlfriend. (2) She never calls when she says she's going to call. (3) Furthermore, she sometimes makes a date and then calls it off at the last second. (4) Worst of all, she never wants to pay for anything when we finally do go out.

The main idea of this paragraph is that Janet is a terrible girlfriend, which the writer states in sentence (1). Sentences (2), (3), and (4) provide examples that support the main idea.

On the GED, you won't be specifically asked to identify which sentences are main ideas and which are support. Instead, you'll be asked how to organize main ideas and support. In other words, you'll be asked to look carefully at individual sentences and paragraphs, and determine what order they should be in to make the paragraph most effective.

There are a number of common organizational patterns that can be used to put supporting sentences in order. They include:

  1. Chronological order. This pattern is used when the writer is describing what happened, should happen, or will happen over time. For example:
      (1) Making a sandwich is easy. (2) First you take out two slices of bread. (3) Then you put a piece of meat on one slice and a piece of cheese on the other. (4) Finally, you put the meat and cheese together with the bread on the outside and eat.
  2. The supporting sentences in this paragraph are organized in chronological order. This is the only logical organization for this paragraph, since putting the sentences in any other order would create confusion.

  3. Order of importance. This places sentences in order from least to most important, or vice-versa. In the previously stated example involving the terrible girlfriend, the sentences are placed in order of what is least important to the writer, leading up to what is most important—that Janet never pays for anything.
  4. Comparison and contrast. This is used when the writer is trying to show how two things are similar or different. For example:
      (1) My friends have very different personalities. (2) Bill is gruff and has a great sense of humor. (3) Jessica, on the other hand, is very kind and serious. (4) Most unique of all is Paul, who is completely unpredictable.

As you can see, sentences (2) through (4) support the main idea, which is that the writer's friends have very different personalities. They are organized in order to compare and contrast each friend to the other.

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