Answer:
Here’s steps on how to do it yourself
Step-by-step explanation:
As their name indicates, introductions should “introduce,” outline, or give an overview of what your paper is going to talk about. This means introducing the topic, outlining the major points that will be discussed, giving relevant background, and presenting a clear thesis (main idea). Introductions are difficult to write if you have not properly outlined your ideas and if you are not aware of the structure needed for your assignment. An introduction should NOT talk vaguely about the topic or give an overly broad background. They should give specific details and bits of information that outline the parts of the paper. As seen in the example below, students should begin their introduction with a clear topic sentence and end with a detailed thesis. Avoid vague language, over-generalizations, or going off-topic.
As the “meat” of the paper, the body is where the main ideas are developed, sources are brought in to support them, and the overall argument is made. Each paragraph within the body should revolve around one major idea and follow the basic guidelines of a paragraph, i.e., topic sentence, idea, support, wrap-up. Outlining is key to writing the paper’s body. With a proper outline, you’ll know how many paragraphs (or ideas) you want to present, what order you want to present them, and what you want to say in them.
Using the sample outline we created earlier, you can easily see how this paper’s three body paragraphs would be structured, what ideas they will each talk about, and what support will be needed. Notice that each idea/paragraph within the body is supported by evidence. Much of your writing in HCI will demand that you support it with source evidence, so the body is where you would quote, paraphrase, summarize, or present data/information from credible texts.