A topic sentence is the opening sentence of a paragraph that states the one central idea that the rest of the paragraph will develop. A strong topic sentence tells the reader exactly what to expect and makes your writing feel controlled, purposeful and easy to follow.
What is a topic sentence?
Think of a topic sentence as a signpost. It tells both the reader — and you, the writer — what territory this paragraph will cover. Every sentence that follows should support, develop or illustrate the claim the topic sentence makes.
Without a topic sentence, a paragraph can drift between ideas and lose focus. With one, the paragraph has a clear purpose that holds all its sentences together.
At KS3, topic sentences appear in:
- Analytical essays (literature and language): each paragraph opens with a claim about the text, the writer's technique or a theme.
- Persuasive and argument essays: each paragraph opens with one argument point.
- Descriptive and narrative writing: each paragraph opens with a statement about setting, character or mood that the rest of the paragraph brings to life.
What makes a topic sentence strong?
A strong topic sentence does four things:
- States one idea only — not two or three at once.
- Makes a claim — it goes beyond stating a fact; it takes a position that needs to be supported.
- Links to the essay question or task — the best topic sentences contain echoes of the question's key words.
- Sets up the evidence — it should make the reader expect a quotation, a fact or an example to follow.
A weak topic sentence is often either too vague ("This paragraph will discuss themes") or too specific ("Shakespeare uses the word 'fair' seven times in the play"). Neither one is a claim that needs developing — one says nothing, and the other is already complete.
Worked examples: weak vs strong topic sentences
Example 1: Literature essay
Task: How does Shakespeare present the theme of jealousy in Othello?
Weak: "Shakespeare writes about jealousy in Othello." Why it is weak: This merely restates the question. It is not a claim that needs developing — the entire essay addresses it.
Strong: "Shakespeare presents jealousy as a disease that corrupts Othello's reason before it destroys his relationship." Why it is strong: It makes a specific claim (jealousy as disease; it corrupts reason before destroying the relationship), it uses subject-specific language, and it creates an expectation of evidence to come.
Example 2: Persuasive essay
Task: Write an article arguing that schools should do more to tackle food waste.
Weak: "Food waste is a problem in schools." Why it is weak: It is a bare fact, not a developed argument. The reader already knows this — the paragraph needs to tell them why it matters or what should be done.
Strong: "Schools have a responsibility to lead by example on sustainability, and addressing food waste in canteens is one of the simplest and most visible ways they can do so." Why it is strong: It makes a value claim (responsibility, leading by example), it narrows to a specific action (canteen food waste), and it signals the argument the paragraph will develop.
Example 3: Descriptive writing
Task: Describe a town centre early on a winter morning.
Weak: "It was cold and quiet." Why it is weak: It is too simple and uninviting. It does not create a distinct mood or set up an interesting scene.
Strong: "In the grey hour before the shops opened, the town centre belonged to the frost and the pigeons." Why it is strong: It evokes a specific mood (emptiness, cold), it uses precise detail (frost, pigeons), and it makes the reader want to read on to see what the scene contains.
How to write a topic sentence: a step-by-step approach
Step 1: Know what your paragraph is about. Before you write the topic sentence, write a one-word or one-phrase note to yourself: jealousy, food waste argument, empty town. That note becomes the raw material for your topic sentence.
Step 2: Turn the note into a claim. Push beyond the topic word by asking: What do I want to say about this? The answer to that question is your topic sentence.
Step 3: Check it against the question. Re-read the essay question or task. Does your topic sentence answer it (or contribute to answering it)? If not, revise it until it does.
Step 4: Read it in isolation and ask: does this sentence make the reader expect more? If your topic sentence could stand alone as a complete answer, it is probably too narrow. If it raises a question the paragraph needs to answer, it is doing its job.
Common mistakes at KS3
Announcing the paragraph ("In this paragraph I will talk about...") — this wastes a sentence that could be doing argumentative work. Delete the announcement and simply make the claim directly.
Placing the topic sentence at the end — some students write their evidence and then arrive at their main point at the close. This is the wrong order. The reader needs the claim first; the evidence comes after.
Starting every paragraph with "Another technique is..." — this makes every paragraph feel like a list item rather than a developing argument. Vary your openings: "Shakespeare further develops...", "The most significant shift in mood occurs when...", "A contrasting perspective emerges..."
Frequently asked questions
Does a topic sentence always have to be the first sentence of a paragraph?
By convention, yes — and this is the safest approach for KS3 essays. Placing the main idea first makes the paragraph immediately clear to the reader (and to the examiner). Some experienced writers occasionally delay the topic sentence for stylistic effect, but this risks confusion. At KS3 and GCSE, always lead with your claim.
How is a topic sentence different from a thesis statement?
A thesis statement covers the entire essay — it is the overarching argument stated in the introduction. A topic sentence covers a single paragraph — it states the one idea that paragraph will develop. An essay has one thesis statement and one topic sentence per body paragraph.
What if my paragraph needs to cover two ideas?
It probably should not. If you find your topic sentence trying to hold two separate points, split the paragraph into two. Each paragraph should make and develop one claim. Two underdeveloped ideas in a single paragraph will earn less credit than two paragraphs each with a fully developed single point.
Can I start a topic sentence with "I" in a KS3 English essay?
In persuasive and argument writing, using "I" is often appropriate: "I believe that schools have a responsibility..." In literary analysis, a more impersonal register is usually preferred: "Shakespeare presents jealousy as..." rather than "I think Shakespeare is showing jealousy as..." Follow your teacher's guidance on the specific task register, but in analytical essays, impersonal constructions are generally the stronger choice.
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