Question
How should supporting evidence be presented in a conclusion? Responses Supporting evidence should be explained in full detail. Supporting evidence should be explained in full detail. - no response given Supporting evidence should be summarized. Supporting evidence should be summarized. - no response given Supporting evidence should be supported with additional evidence. Supporting evidence should be supported with additional evidence. - no response given Supporting evidence should be introduced.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
In a conclusion, supporting evidence should typically be **summarized**. While it's important to reinforce the main points, the conclusion is not the place to introduce new evidence or delve deeply into detailed explanations. Instead, the goal is to succinctly remind readers of the key supporting points that substantiate your argument or thesis statement. This helps to reinforce your main ideas without overwhelming the reader with unnecessary information or complexity. If applicable, you can briefly indicate how the evidence ties back to the overall argument or implications of your findings.
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