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Argumentative Thesis Statement Template

Use this argumentative thesis statement template when you need one strong piece of essay structure, not a full paper outline. The template gives you a reusable pattern, a filled example, and checks for adapting it to your prompt.

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Copyable template

Outline structure

Copy the sections first, then replace bracketed text with details from your prompt, sources, or experience.

01

Counterpoint-first thesis

  • Although [reasonable opposing view], [your position] because [reason 1] and [reason 2].
02

Policy thesis

  • [Group/institution] should [action] because [problem], [benefit], and [evidence-based reason].
03

Qualified thesis

  • [Topic] is beneficial only when [condition], because without [limit] it can [risk].

Filled example

Filled Argumentative Thesis

01

School policy example

  • Although phone bans can reduce distraction, schools should allow structured phone use because students need digital literacy, emergency access, and guided practice with self-regulation.

How to use it

Adapt the structure

  1. 1Choose the pattern that matches the job this sentence or paragraph must do.
  2. 2Replace every bracketed placeholder with a specific topic, claim, source, or consequence.
  3. 3Read it aloud once to check that it sounds like your assignment rather than a formula.
  4. 4Revise the wording so the component connects naturally to the paragraph before and after it.

Common mistakes

Check before drafting

  • Writing a claim no one could disagree with.
  • Adding three reasons that are really the same reason in different words.

FAQ

Questions about this template

Q

When should I use a argumentative thesis statement template?

Use it when you know the idea you need but need a reliable academic shape for presenting it clearly.

Q

Will a template make my essay sound generic?

Only if you leave the placeholders vague. The structure can repeat; the claim, evidence, and analysis should be specific to your prompt.

Q

Can I use this inside any essay type?

Yes, but adapt the wording to the assignment. A literary analysis sentence, a research paragraph, and an admissions paragraph all need different evidence and tone.

Write from the outline

Start with structure, then draft with sources and citations.

Copy the template into EssayGenius and turn each bullet into a paragraph with source search, revision help, and citation support nearby.

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