This is exactly what I'm having problems with.
Going from "Discoveries are inherently dynamic and heighten our understanding of the world around us."
to "Robert Gray's poems act as a catalyst for discovery by reinventing the image of Australia and renewing our relationship with the physical landscape."
In my paragraphs I usually just have a generic sentence that links to the question and module. Then in the second sentence I jump into the text and say something like "These ideas are exemplified in Robert Gray's "Poem" that reinvents our relationship with landscape etc."
Then you kind of just have to go over the text and find the things/ideas that actually allowed you to come to this conclusion (or whatever your teacher said was important). So since I have 1 main idea per paragraph I usually pick about 3 points from the text that support the main idea but also link together and flow from each other (and I have to make sure that I'm not being repetitive and that all these points are inherently different) and stretched out with actual content this usually takes me to 200 words per paragraph (incl. topic sentence and concluding sentence.)
Like if I were to write this about Harry Potter and how it redefines our ideas about the evil nature of witch craft (main idea) I'd be like
-it allows the characters to develop stronger friendships and relationships (evidence: allows Harry to escape neglect and abuse and enter a world where he is treated with respect)
-however despite magic being used as a tool for goodness, it can also be manipulated for evil(evidence: voldemort) but ultimately the text clearly condemns this behaviour (evidence: death eaters name carries negative connotations and in general bad wizards are given a bad rap)
-finally harry potter shows how witchcraft is not inherently evil as it is used as a weapon of the good (incl. some quote about saving the day)
So you kind of just have to do that with every paragraph you have.
That strategy is just like "technique - check. quote - check. linkage - check."
This strategy is fine but don't get caught up with the formula/structure while compromising the depth of your actual analysis. I usually just say a point (with links to q. and module), then follow it with evidence (whether it be quote or technique... i don't always have both together but in a paragraph I usually use 5 techniques and 3-4 quotes), and a short phrase (or short sentence but I try not to spend too many words) on how this proves my thesis.