The introduction should indicate what topic you are discussing and what is your point of view or thesis (is the item good or bad for you?. It can also indicate points which you will subsequently discuss in the body of the paper.
The body should develop points in support of your thesis/point of view
It can also acknowledge and address counterpoints to your view (showing awareness that other people have a different point of view). However, while your paper may acknowledge that contrary points of view exist to your thesis, your paper should point out that despite the opposite point of view, you feel that your point of view is the better/more valid one (you want to win your argument).
- to support your point of view, you need to cite from three of the five sources (you can cite from all five if you want)
- remember to use quotation marks if you are quoting exact words from the text
- If you are paraphrasing (using your own words to describe someone else’s ideas), you still need to cite with an in-text citation
III. The conclusion should wrap up or confirm your thesis (that the item discussed is good or bad for you)