The General Argument Essay The second type of essay on the Advanced English Language exam is the argumentative essay. Because it is often seen as a "give away," many students believe it to be the easiest of the three essays to write. Unfortunately, too many students spend too little time in the actual planning of this essay and, as a result, present an underdeveloped, illogical, or off-topic piece. Although there is a great deal of latitude given for the response to the prompt, the argumentative essay demands careful reading and planning.
The General Argument Essay Regarded by many as the easiest of the three kinds of essay questions, the general argument essay question also has a reputation for creating all sorts of problems. It is designed as a “contemporary issues” question, but actually, it is really a “values” question. ◦ What are your values? What do you think our society should value? What should a moral, thoughtful, or reflective society consider its most important strengths? These fundamentals issues are inherent to this type of question.
The Prompt The prompt itself is set up by a brief passage from fiction, poetry, or nonfiction. The passage can be as long as half a page or as brief as two lines. It provides you with a spokesperson for an issue – an opinion is offered – and then you are asked to agree, disagree, or qualify that opinion based on your own experience and/or reading.
What Does the Argumentative Essay Require of Me? Basically, you need to do three things: 1. understand the nature of the position taken in the prompt 2. take a specific stand—argue, qualify, or disagree—with the assertion in the prompt 3. clearly and logically support your claim
Identify the Claim When you deal with a general argument prompt, there are essentially three things you must do: 1. First – and this is absolutely vital – you must understand the claim being made by the author. 2. Second, you need to perceive the larger social context and express feelings about it. 3. Finally – and this is also crucial – you are being asked to make your argument using examples from your own experience.
What Does It Mean to Agree, Disagree, or Qualify? An argumentative essay on the AP English Language and Composition exam will present you with an excerpt or a statement. Once you understand what the passage is saying, you have to ask yourself: ◦ Do I think about this subject in the same way as the writer/speaker? (Agree; Support; Defend) ◦ Do I think the writer/speaker is totally wrong? (Disagree; Challenge; Refute) ◦ Do I think some of what is said is correct and some incorrect? (Qualify) ◦ Regardless of the synonyms used, these are the three choices you will have.
How Should I Approach the Writing of My Argumentative Essay? Before beginning to actually write the essay, you need to do some quick planning. ◦ You could brainstorm a list of ideas, construct a chart, or create an outline. Whatever it is, you MUST find a way to allow yourself to think through the issue and your position.
Once I've Chosen My Position on the Given Issue, How Do I Go About Supporting It? Remember that you've been taught how to write an argument throughout your school years, and you've even studied it in detail in your AP Comp course this year. Here is a brief overview of the kinds of support/evidence you could include to bolster your argument: ◦ — facts/statistics ◦ — contrast and comparison ◦ — quotations ◦ — dialogue ◦ — needed definitions ◦ — recognition of the opposition Just make certain to choose the strategy or strategies that are most familiar to you and with which you feel most comfortable. Don't try to pad your essay with irrelevancies. — examples — anecdotes — details — cause and effect — appeal to authority
Does It Matter What Tone I Take in My Argumentative Essay? The College Board and the AP Comp readers are open to a wide range of approaches. You can choose to be informal and personal, formal and objective, or even humorous and irreverent, and anything in between. Just be certain that your choice is appropriate for your purpose.
Will I Be Penalized for Taking an Unpopular, Unexpected, Irreverent, or Bizarre Position on the Given Issue? As long as you are addressing the prompt and appropriately supporting your position, there is no danger of your losing points on your essay, because you've decided to take a different approach. Your essay is graded for process and mastery and manipulation of language, not for how close you come to the viewpoint of your grader.
How Should I Plan to Spend My Time Writing the Argumentative Essay? Learning to budget your time is a skill that can be most helpful in writing the successful essay. The following is a sample timeline for you to consider: ◦ 1–3 minutes reading and working the prompt ◦ 3 minutes deciding on a position ◦ 10–12 minutes planning the support of your position ◦ 20 minutes writing the essay ◦ 3 minutes proofreading
Organization There is a relatively easy three-step process you should follow before you begin to write your essay: 1. Step one is to critically read the passage and underline anything that clearly defines the author’s claim. 2. Step two is to set forth your immediate reaction to the issue in a few words: are you for it, against it, or ambivalent toward it? 3. Step three is to make a list of viable, thoughtful examples you can use to help illustrate your argument. ◦ When you write the essay, don’t just drop the examples into the paragraphs. You must include them with elaboration and commentary, identifying their relevance to and importance in your argument.
This is an Easy Essay to Write You should start by identifying and restating the fundamental claim and then indicate to the grader whether you intend to agree, disagree, or qualify. ◦ A brief word about qualifying: qualifying means simply that you can see some good points and some not good points about an idea. You might decide that this concept might work well for local government issues but would never be successful, for the entire country, or the idea was great one hundred years ago but wouldn’t work today. Be clear on your discussion about the positives and negatives you see. Your subsequent paragraphs should discuss the quality and meaning of your various examples and then close with a summarizing statement. Remember: 1.Formulate your opinion. 2.Explain your evidence. 3.Finish your essay.