- 1). Create a flow chart in the word processor of your choice or download a chart from the Internet. Alternatively, you may make a simple flow chart on paper by drawing boxes with arrows pointing to the next box.
- 2). Enter the thesis statement, or topic statement, of the paragraph in the first box. The topic sentence does not have to be the first sentence of the paragraph, but this placement is common in descriptive writing. Your sentences can be rearranged after the first draft is complete.
- 3). Enter supporting points in the next three or four boxes of the flow chart. If you are working on paper, use a pencil. Put the basic ideas of the sentences in the boxes, if you do not yet have fully developed sentences. Use the graphic organizer to examine the flow of each idea into the next. Each idea must be presented in a logical order, so as not to confuse the reader. Each supporting idea not only describes the overall topic, but needs to build on the idea before it.
- 4). Read over the first few boxes and rearrange them until they flow smoothly. Reading them out loud helps. Make sure the ideas---or sentences---all support the main idea. Each idea should follow the next. For example: The wheel is round; the roundness is slightly flattened at the bottom of the wheel; and the weight of the car makes it bulge slightly. Each point builds on the one before it.
- 5). Write complete, descriptive sentences for each idea. Remember that each descriptive element should build on the one prior.
- 6). Refer to the flow chart throughout the writing process, to help you keep your sentences in logical order. Work without editing at first; just write.
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