Creating a connection with someone reading a paper that you wrote is complicated if you as a
writer do not catch the reader's attention. As writers, we need to investigate who we want to
connect with our readers and what their interests are to write about that. However, we cannot
split all the paper; it needs to be interesting for a certain number of people with the same
interests. In the article of Chris Hall from the University of Wyoming, the research said that "
Deprived of any reader contact, their texts fall short of communicating. For all their special
efforts, these students are likely to produce textbooks that fail to highlight a topic, introduce a
particular point of view (a thesis statement with a central idea), provide adequate supporting
comments and examples, or give textual statements a readable cohesiveness. In short, writer
considerations that help readers find meaning in a text go unfulfilled, and readers are left with
either a rambling text or one loaded with ambiguity." this part of the research refers to how a
paper needs to be written to the readers be interested. There are some tips to do it, and it will be
helpful if we as writers follow them.
Hall, Chris. “Interacting with a Reader: Using the Strip Story to Develop Reciprocity.” College
Composition and Communication, vol. 39, no. 3, National Council of Teachers of English, 1988,
pp. 353–56, [Link]