

Your readers (instructors, friends, or classmates) tell you that they had trouble following your organization or train of thought.


Transitions are not just verbal decorations that embellish your paper by making it sound or read better.
#SEQUENCE WORDS HOW TO#
Transitions signal relationships between ideas-relationships such as: “Another example coming up-stay alert!” or “Here’s an exception to my previous statement” or “Although this idea appears to be true, here’s the real story.” Basically, transitions provide the reader with directions for how to piece together your ideas into a logically coherent argument. Whether single words, quick phrases, or full sentences, they function as signs that tell readers how to think about, organize, and react to old and new ideas as they read through what you have written. In other words, transitions tell readers what to do with the information you present to them. Transitions help you to achieve these goals by establishing logical connections between sentences, paragraphs, and sections of your papers. In both academic writing and professional writing, your goal is to convey information clearly and concisely, if not to convert the reader to your way of thinking. The function and importance of transitions This handout will introduce you to some useful transitional expressions and help you employ them effectively. In this crazy, mixed-up world of ours, transitions glue our ideas and our essays together.
