Cause & Effect
Cause & Effect
Cause & Effect
Effect Paper
ENG 101
freshman english
sample cause-
effect essay
EFFECT
#3
Focus on Causes
CAUSE #1
EFFECT CAUSE #2
CAUSE #3
Cause and Ef fect
Chain
CAUSE
EFFECT
CAUSE
EFFECT
List Causes and Effects
• First look for immediate causes/effects.
• Then look for remote causes/effects –
underlying, more basic reasons/results.
• Make separate lists of causes/effects.
• List evidence next to each cause/effect.
• Generate additional material for weak points.
• Rate the items on the list by asking, “How
significant is this cause/effect? Would the
situation exist or have arisen without it?
Main cause: the most important cause
Contributory Causes: less important
Immediate Cause: closely precedes the
effect.
Remote cause: less obvious because it
involves something in the past or far
away.
Causal Chain: an effect can be the
cause to another effect, on so on.
Causal Relation:
Necessary Cause - one that must be present
for the effect to occur.
Ex. Combustion is necessary to drive a gasoline
engine.
Sufficient Cause - one that can produce an
effect unaided, though there may be more
than one sufficient cause of a given effect.
Ex. A dead battery is enough to keep a car from
starting--but faulty spark plugs or an empty gas
tank will have the same effect.
Contributory Cause - one that helps to
produce an effect but cannot do so by itself.
Ex. Running a red light might help to cause an
accident....though other facts -- pedestrians or
other cars in the intersection -- must also be
present.
Information taken from: http://www.howard.k12.md.us/mth/english_dept/adv-comp/eng_effect.html
Avoiding Post Hoc Reasoning:
Do not assume that just because even A
precedes event B, event A caused even
B. This illogical assumption is called post
hoc reasoning. This error leads you to
confuse coincidence with causality.
Do not confuse words like because,
therefore and consequently (indicating a
causal relationship), with words like
subsequently, later, and afterward
(chronological relationship words)
Planning a Cause and
Ef fect Essay
Purpose and Thesis:
Be sure to identify the relationships among the
specific causes and effect you will discuss.
Thesis statement should tell the reader
It doesn't have to be persuasive
The points you plan to consider
The position you will take
Whether you will emphasize causes, effects, or
both.
The cause and/or effect you consider most
important.
Planning a Cause and Effect Essay
The order in which you will treat your points.
Order and sequence; several possibilities
include:
Chronological
Main cause first, and then contributory causes
Contributory causes first, and then main
cause.
Negative effects first, then positive
First dismiss events that are not causes, and
then discuss actual causes for an effect.
Most obvious causes first, and then less
obvious causes.
Planning a Cause and Effect Essay
Organizing the Essay
Introduction
• Start with a quote, a list, a description, or
statistics to catch the reader’s attention.
• Introduce the subject and explain the
situation.
• Give any background material necessary.
• Thesis: state your 3 points in the
cause/effect relationship.
Body
Patterns of Organization
Use transitions between each cause and/or effect
and each paragraph.
A. B. C. D. E.
11.6 p.253
11.10 p.255
11.12 p. 258
reading 256-257
reading 262-263
Multiple Causes--
>Ef fect
In this pattern, the organization is as follows: