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Formal Three-Part Outline:
Introduction, Body & Conclusion

NOTE: Formal outlines require a special numbering system. If you
have a I, you must have a II. If you have an A,
you must have a B. If you have a 1, you must have a
2, and so on:
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The traditional outline has three sections:
introduction, body, and conclusion.
The basic model looks like this:
Title
-
Introduction
-
The
background
-
The
thesis statement
-
Body
-
First
major category of support
-
Supporting detail
-
Supporting detail
-
Supporting detail
-
Second major category of support
-
Supporting detail
-
Supporting detail
-
Third
major category of support
-
Supporting detail
-
Supporting detail
-
Conclusion
-
Review of the major categories of
support
-
The
answer, solution, or final option
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Example:
Alcohol Testing for Mass Transportation
Employees
-
Congress
mandates testing for transportation
employees
-
Background on why
-
Explanation of new policy
-
How and
why alcohol testing is used
-
Circumstances for Alcohol Testing
-
Pre-employment
-
Post-accident
-
Reasonable suspicion
-
Random
-
Return to duty/follow-up testing
-
Method of Alcohol Testing
-
Blood
-
Urine
-
Breath
-
Performance
-
Options for Alcohol Abusers
-
Retesting
-
Treatment
-
Termination of employment
-
Conclusion
-
-
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