Developing an Argument in Writing: Claims, Inferences and Argument Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −Examine the process of developing.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reading Journal Articles Critically Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −Introduce you to the idea of critiquing and analysis tools.
Advertisements

Becoming a Reflective Practitioner
Effective Presentation Design
Introductions Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... -Discuss the function of an introduction -Consider the features of an effective.
Introductions and Conclusions Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... −Discuss the function of introductions and conclusions −Examine.
Writing Essays in Exam Conditions Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will… -Introduce you to common examination formats -Offer strategies.
Planning for Exam Revision Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will… −Explore what feeds into preparing for revision, including the exam.
Writing in an Academic Style Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: – Establish the difference between academic writing and other written.
Punctuation: Commas, Colons, Semi-colons, Dashes and Hyphens, and Brackets Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will −Refresh your understanding.
MA and MSc: Research Skills, Reading and Note-taking This workshop will: -Refresh your under-graduate skills in reading and note-taking -Help you to understand.
Speed Reading: Assess your Reading Speed and Techniques Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will −Introduce you to the concept of reading.
Grammar: Voice, Academic Tenses and Homophones This workshop will: −Refresh your understanding of grammar terminology −Cover passive and active voices;
Reviewing Literature Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −Explain what completing a review of literature involves −Offer tips on.
Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser
Writing in an Academic Style: Sentences and Paragraphs
Effective Report Writing – The Basics This workshop will: - Provide a practical guide on how reports differ from other types of academic writing - Look.
Note-taking Skills Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser −Provide some guidelines for taking effective notes in lectures and from reading −Explore strategies.
Group Work Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −Explore how to overcome the difficulties of working in a group −Examine the different.
Using Marker Feedback to Improve Your Work: Using Sources and A Reasoned Argument Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... −Introduce.
Managing Your Time For Study Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −help you investigate how you use your time −include plenty of.
Conclusions Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... −Discuss the function of a conclusion −Explore the features of an effective conclusion.
Writing an Under-graduate Research Proposal: Science Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: - Consider the ways proposals differ from.
Writing an Under-graduate Research Proposal: Social Science Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: - Consider the ways proposals differ.
Managing Your Final Year Project Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: -Introduce the differences between projects and dissertations.
This workshop will: −Offer practical tips on how you can improve your recall of the material being presented −Explore the important aspects of presenter.
Speed Reading: Assess your Reading Speed and Controlling External Influences Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −Assess you reading.
Citing, Referencing and Avoiding Plagiarism Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will −Explain what plagiarism is and how it can be avoided.
Planning Your Assignment Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... - Identify what ‘planning’ means when tackling an assignment and.
Punctuation: Apostrophes and Full Stops Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will −Refresh your understanding of apostrophes and full.
Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser
Proofing, Editing and Drafting Your Own Work Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... -Introduce you to the processes of drafting,
MA and MSc: ‘Culture Shock’: Transition from Under-graduate to Post-Graduate Study This workshop will: -Help you to understand the differences between.
Effective Reading Strategies
Reading Journal Articles Critically
Surviving Your First Semester Louise Livesey Academic Skills Advisor This workshop will: − Provide basic information on who, where and what to access for.
Choosing Journal Articles Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... −Help you decide which articles to use in your written assignments.
Grammar: ‘Have’ not ‘Of’, Parts of a Sentence, and Clauses This workshop will: −Refresh your understanding of grammar terminology - Cover ‘to have’ verb.
Using Marker Feedback to Improve Your Work: Relevance to Topic and Instruction, and Presentation Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will...
Structuring Written Assignments Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −Explain what ‘structure’ means −Suggest the basic principles.
Becoming an Independent Learner Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... −Explore what is required to become an independent learner.
Understanding Assignment Questions : Propositions and Assumptions Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... −Provide information on.
Theory, Sources and Evidence in Reflective Writing Assignments Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −Describe what theory and evidence.
Understanding Assignment Questions : Descriptive v Critically analytic Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will −Explain the importance.
Writing an Under-graduate Research Proposal: Science Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: - Consider the ways proposals differ from.
Developing an Argument : Constructing an Argument Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −Revisit what an argument is −Suggest ‘types’
Planning for Exam Revision Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will… − Explore what feeds into preparing for revision, including the exam.
Writing Essays in Exam Conditions Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will… - Introduce you to common examination formats - Offer a model.
‘My work is poorly structured,’ My Feedback Says Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: − Consider what structure is and how it can.
‘My work was too descriptive,’ My Feedback Says Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will... − Explore ways to engage in analysis/be analytical.
Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser
Effective Report Writing – The Basics
Exam Revision Strategies
Planning for Exam Revision
Writing in an Academic Style
Exam Revision Strategies
Choosing Journal Articles
Developing an Argument: What an Argument is
‘I didn’t answer the question or address the brief’, My Feedback Says.
Critical Analysis in Writing
Writing Essays in Exam Conditions
Reading Journal Articles Critically: 2
Managing Your Final Year Project
Effective Reading Strategies
Developing an Argument: From Beginning to End
Becoming an Independent Learner
Planning Your Assignment
Critical Analysis When Reading
Becoming a Reflective Practitioner
Writing in an Academic Style: Sentences and Paragraphs
Understanding Assignment Questions: Descriptive v Critically analytic
Presentation transcript:

Developing an Argument in Writing: Claims, Inferences and Argument Louise Livesey Academic Skills Adviser This workshop will: −Examine the process of developing an ‘argument’ when preparing and writing −Identify the components of an ‘argument’ −Understand the role of claims and inferences

1.What is a claim? 2.What is an inference? 3.What is an argument? Today’s Plan

A claim = ‘such and such is the case’ Apply critical thinking to the claim: you look at the possible meaning and significance of it evaluate it by comparing it to other claims make an informed decision 1.What is a claim?

Including President Obama, five out of the most recent seven US presidents have been left-handed. Possible ?s: A.What proportion of the US population is left-handed? 10% so there may be something significant about such a high proportion of recent left- handed presidents. B.What about the presidents before the last seven? 3 out of 36, ie about 10%. So why are recent presidents so different? C.If Barack Obama had lost the election in 2008, would that have meant that four of the most recent seven US presidents had been left- handed? No: his opponent was left-handed. If George W. Bush (right- handed) had lost, his opponent was also left-handed! D.How many other countries have (had) left-handed leaders 1.What is a claim?

Activity 1 35% of US and 20% of UK entrepreneurs are dyslexic Possible ?s  Is the definition of ‘entrepreneur’ the same in the US as it is in the UK?  Is the definition of ‘dyslexia’ the same in the US as it is in the UK?  Are the figures of 35 and 20% significant?  More specifically, what figure would we expect if the % of dyslexic entrepreneurs was the same as the % of the population that is dyslexic?  If the figure is not the same (or not even nearly the same), what might be an (or the) explanation? 1.What is a claim?

Claims to inference 1.What is a claim?

One claim to claim something else claim claim = inference 2.What is an inference?

More than one inference used to defend one point of view is an argument many inferences = argument 3.What is an argument?

a)Derek Bentley did not shoot the gun so he should not have been hung. b)Derek Bentley meant ‘give the gun to the policeman’ so he should not have been hung. 3.What is an argument?

Activity 2 People with dyslexia should be recruited to work in organisations where the ability to delegate is important. People with dyslexia should be recruited to work in organisations where problem-solving abilities are important. People with dyslexia should be recruited to work in organisations where the ability to communicate is important. 3.What is an argument?

References Clip art – argument Cottrell, S. (2013) The Study Skills Handbook. 4 th Ed. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. University of Surrey. (2014) Writing Skills. Guildford: University of Surrey. [online] Available at: 1.htmhttp://libweb.surrey.ac.uk/library/skills/writing%20Skills%20Leicester/page_0 1.htm [Accessed ] Van den Brink-Budgen, R. (2010) Critical Thinking for Students. 4th Ed. Oxford: How To Books Ltd.

References Oxford Dictionaries. (2014) Abbreviations. Oxford: OUP. [online] Available at: [Accessed ] Sauter, J. (2008) The Apostrophe character rendered using the OCR-A font. Florida: Wikimedia Commons. [online] Available at: [Accessed ] Super Teacher Worksheets. (2013) There, Their, They’re. Tonawanda:Super Teacher Worksheets. Available at: (Accessed ) The University of Wisconsin-Madison. (2014) 10: Apostrophe errors. Madison: The University of Wisconsin- Madison. [online] Available at: [Accessed ]

Academic Skills Advice Service Where are we? Chesham Building B0.23 What do we do? Support undergraduate students with their academic skills by running clinics and workshops, having bookable appointment slots, and enabling students to drop-in for Instant Action. Who are we? Michael and Helen specialise in Maths Support; Lucy and Russell advise students on study skills; and I (Louise) deliver the workshops When can you come for help? Everyday both face to face and on-line How do I get in touch? academic- or website skillsacademic-

Any questions?