Organization
Organization
Organization
Quick Writes
In five minutes, write all the ideas and concepts you know
about a paragraph and how paragraphs are organized.
Afterward, share your answer in class.
Review
Paragraph
● a group of sentences
● a good paragraph has the following:
○ a single main idea
○ topic sentence
○ supporting details that further explain or elaborate
the main idea
Learn about It!
Paragraph
● Main idea
○ the main point or central idea in the paragraph
● Topic sentence
○ states the main idea
○ found in the beginning, middle, or end of the
paragraph
● Supporting Ideas/Details
○ elaborates, supports, or explains the main idea of the
paragraph
Learn about It!
Companies are always coming up with new ways to foster camaraderie among their
employees. One of the activities that has been used of late is the production of a stage play.
A theatrical production is helpful and educational as a team-building activity because
it involves a lot of people coming together for a single goal. It requires leadership skills
to direct and motivate the whole group towards the objective. It also requires managerial
skills, because it is crucial to organize people or teams working on various aspects of the
play, such as set design, props, and costumes. In addition, staging a play requires flexibility
and improvisation, because a lot can go wrong in a live performance. And so, people may
need to adapt. Lastly, it requires social skills, especially for those who will take center stage.
The stars of the show must be able to work in harmony with those behind the scenes. It is
Learn about It!
Achiever’s Curse
Back in my early school days, I was what you would call an achiever. In elementary, I often
had the highest grades in class, and so I was a regular in the honor roll. In high school, I
made it to the honors class, where I would continue to perform well in my studies. I would
even place in the top ten of the entire year. However, upon entering college, things started
going downhill. Because I was so used to grasping lessons so easily before, I would get
frustrated and give up when a new lesson seemed too difficult to understand. When a task
required more time and effort than I was used to exerting, I would procrastinate or avoid
doing it altogether. Furthermore, since my self-esteem was so closely tied to people thinking
I was brilliant, I would refuse to even attempt anything where I might fail. And so I went from
overachiever to underachiever, because despite my intellect, the notion of failure became a
self-fulfilling prophecy. I wish I had achieved more things in my youth out of effort instead of
Writing Prompts
1. Find a partner.
2. Each pair randomly picks a topic from a set or list of topics
your teacher has prepared.
3. Your task is to write a paragraph each on the topic.
Afterward, exchange paragraphs and analyze each other’s
paragraph, identifying the main idea and explaining the
supporting details. Also, determine whether all supporting
ideas were appropriate for the main idea.
4. Your teacher may discuss your outputs and your learnings
from the activity.
Assignment
Content/ The main idea is The main idea can The main idea is
Substance not clear. The be determined. clear. Supporting
supporting ideas Supporting ideas ideas are all related
are illogical or are sufficient to and thoroughly
unrelated. develop the topic. expound on the
topic.
Organization The details are Supporting details The supporting
poorly organized. are adequately details are well-
No logical flow can organized such that organized and flow
be discerned. logical flow of ideas logically from the
is observed. main topic.
Criteria Beginning Developing Accomplished Score
(0–1 pt.) (2–3 pts.) (4–5 pts.)