RI. 8.8. I CAN DELINEATE AND EVALUATE THE ARGUMENT AND SPECIFIC CLAIMS IN A TEXT, ASSESSING WHETHER THE REASONING IS SOUND AND THE EVIDENCE IS RELEVANT.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
RI 8.8  Delineate – to clearly show or identify something precisely.  Evaluate – to judge the value or condition of something in a thoughtful, meaningful.
Advertisements

Argument Writing “Argument literacy is fundamental to being educated… Because argument is not standard in most school curricula, only 20% of those who.
Value conflicts and assumptions - 1 While an author usually offers explicit reasons why he comes to a certain conclusion, he also makes (implicit) assumptions.
The Teaching of RI 8.8 By Joseph Schmith.
The Persuasive Process
8 th Grade9 th Grade10 th Grade11 th Grade Anchor Standards for College & Career Readiness.
Critical Reading, Thinking, & Writing Analysis. Analysis: Reading Critically Analyze a text by identifying its significant parts and examining how those.
Chapter 11: Evaluating an Author’s Argument
Three choices for Argument/Synthesis Writing
Body Paragraphs Writing body paragraphs is always a T.R.E.A.T. T= Transition R= Reason/point from thesis/claim E= Evidence (quote from the text) A= Answer.
Unit 2: The Art of Persuasion Argument and Persuasion Unit 2: Society’s Influence of the Individual; Art of Persuasion.
Oral Communications Analysis and Evaluation. California Content Standards Analysis and Evaluation of Oral and Media Communications 1.13 Analyze the four.
An Introduction to Argumentative Writing
Argumentative Writing: Prewriting and Drafting Argumentative Writing.
 An argument is a reasoned, logical way of demonstrating that the writer’s position, belief, or conclusion is valid.  Arguments seek to make people.
AIM: How can we apply our knowledge of the argumentative essay to “Who Speaks for the Carriage Horses?” Do Now: Take out a notebook where you can take.
WEEK 3 THE TERM PAPER. WHAT IS A TERM PAPER? An academic essay that is rather lengthy, prepared by an academic writer Written in a concise and well documented.
Argument vs Persuasion vs Propaganda Evidence matters!
Argument Writing An Introductory Guide for Middle School Students.
: the art or skill of speaking or writing formally and effectively especially as a way to persuade or influence people.
Is Everything an Argument?
RECOGNIZING, ANALYZING, AND CONSTRUCTING ARGUMENTS
: the art or skill of speaking or writing formally and effectively especially as a way to persuade or influence people.
Inferenc e  A conclusion reached on the basis of evidence and reasoning Anne knew the weather man predicted rain, so she made an inference that it would.
Writing the Argumentative Essay. CHOOSING A TOPIC To begin an argumentative essay, you must first have an opinion you want others to share.
Ethics 160 Moral Arguments. Reasons and Arguments Different claims have different uses in our language. Sometimes, a claim or claims are used as a reason.
Argumentative vs. Analytical Writing An Introduction to Terms and Concepts.
Argumentation.
: the art or skill of speaking or writing formally and effectively especially as a way to persuade or influence people.
Common Core.  Find your group assignment.  As a group, read over the descriptors for mastery of this standard. (The writing standards apply to more.
The Argumentative Essay. What exactly is an Argument? An argument involves the process of establishing a claim and then proving it with the use of logical.
Nonfiction Terms. Types of Nonfiction ▪ Biography: An account of a person’s life as written by another person ▪ Autobiography: A writer’s account of his.
Understanding the Persuasive Techniques in Developing Arguments How a speech can soothe and inspire a grieving population.
Argumentative writing
Academic Vocabulary Unit 7 Cite: To give evidence for or justification of an argument or statement.
WHY DO PEOPLE HAVE DIFFERENT POINTS OF VIEW? ACADEMIC VOCABULARY.
Argumentative Writing Grades College and Career Readiness Standards for Writing Text Types and Purposes arguments 1.Write arguments to support a.
Performance Assessment of Critical Thinking: The Dolphin Dilemma Task Yigal Rosen, Ph.D. Sr. Research Scientist Pearson Knowledge Technologies.
Writing Exercise Try to write a short humor piece. It can be fictional or non-fictional. Essay by David Sedaris.
Argument Writing Standard: 9-10.WS.1. Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or texts, using valid reasoning and relevant.
What is rhetoric? What you need to know for AP Language.
Daily Warm-up: What points would you make if you were presenting an argument against the uniforms to Ms. Rains and Ms. Roach? Homework: Reading Plus due.
Logical Fallacies: Begging the Question. By Dean Berry, Ed. D. This PowerPoint represents the first half of the lesson.
Argumentative Evaluation and Writing
Argumentation.
Argumentative Writing You need your performance assessment books!
Reading and Writing Arguments
An Introduction to Persuasion and Argument
How to Write an Argumentative Essay
Introduction To Debate and Building an Effective Argument
Are they Sound, Relevant, and Sufficient?
Argumentative Writing
The argumentative essay
Activity 2.11: Understanding argumentative elements
Argumentative Writing
RI08 Delineate and evaluate the argument and specific claims in a text, assessing whether the reasoning is sound and the evidence is relevant and sufficient;
The meaning, association, or emotion that has come to be attached to a word is its connotation.
The argumentative essay
Titanic Unit Vocabulary
The argumentative essay
What is an ARGUMENT? An argument is a reasoned, logical way of demonstrating that the writer’s position, belief, or conclusion is valid. Arguments seek.
FOR TEACHERS Monday – Focus on exposing students to vocabulary, getting definitions, and practicing Tuesday – Slip or Trip activity to begin practicing.
Argumentative Writing
Definitions: Evidence-Based Claims- 1.) the ability to take detailed
Argumentative Writing
Argumentative Writing
Argumentative writing
The Struggle for Freedom
How to Write a Document Based Question Essay
Presentation transcript:

RI I CAN DELINEATE AND EVALUATE THE ARGUMENT AND SPECIFIC CLAIMS IN A TEXT, ASSESSING WHETHER THE REASONING IS SOUND AND THE EVIDENCE IS RELEVANT AND SUFFICIENT; RECOGNIZE WHEN IRRELEVANT EVIDENCE IS INTRODUCED I CAN IDENTIFY THE SIDE OF AN ARGUMENT AN AUTHOR PRESENTS IN A TEXT. I CAN DETERMINE THE CREDIBILITY OF THE AUTHOR AND HIS/HER PURPOSE (WHO WROTE IT, WHEN IT WAS WRITTEN, AND WHY IT WAS WRITTEN) I CAN IDENTIFY CLAIMS THAT ARE SUPPORTED BY FACT(S) AND THOSE THAT ARE OPINION(S) I CAN RECOGNIZE WHEN AN AUTHOR INTRODUCES IRRELEVANT EVIDENCE (UNRELATED OR UNNECESSARY EVIDENCE) TO HIS /HER ARGUMENT. I CAN DELINEATE AND EVALUATE AN ARGUMENT USING THE EVIDENCE AN AUTHOR PROVIDES AND DETERMINE IF THE EVIDENCE PROVIDED IS RELEVANT AND SUFFICIENT TO SUPPORT THE CLAIM.

DELINEATE The defense attorney delineated the event of the murder with a precise chronological timeline. PREDICTION:

DENOTATION &ASSOCIATIONS Delineate: trace; describe or portray something Nonlinguistical, Analogy,Metaphor, Simile:

EVALUATE Suspecting that his documents were fraudulent, the Canadian customs officer evaluated the American’s passport, carefully judging whether it was real or fake. PREDICTION:

DENOTATION&ASSOCIATIONS Evaluate: to judge or assess by careful appraisal and study. Nonlinguistical, Analogy, Metaphor, Simile:

ARGUMENT: She worked for weeks to build her argument to support her claim that the summer holiday should be reduced to two weeks, rather than the full three months, due to loss of brain cells. PREDICTION:

DENOTATION&ASSOCIATIONS ARGUMENT IS ABOUT MAKING A CASE IN SUPPORT OF A CLAIM. 1. BEGINS WITH LOOKING AT THE DATA 2. DATA LEADS TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF THESIS STATEMENT OR MAJOR CLAIM. Nonlinguistical, Analogy, Metaphor, Simile:

CLAIM The student’s claim was that the lack of nutritional lunch offerings and the lack of entertainment had caused the eighth grade to be academically and physical lethargic. Prediction:

DENOTATION&ASSOCIATIONS A CLAIM IS: A PART OF THE MAIN ARGUMENT BASED ON EVIDENCE OF SOME SORT NOT AN AUTOMATICALLY ACCEPTED TRUTH NOT TOO BROAD DOES NOT INCLUDE EVIDENCE CAN BE EXPLICIT OR IMPLICIT Nonlinguistical, Analogy, Metaphor, Simile:

COUNTERCLAIM THE STUDENT PROVIDED AN ADEPT, A VERY THOUROUGH AND INSIGHTFUL, COUNTERCLAIM TO THE STUDENT’S CLAIM THAT THE GROUP, ONEDIRECTION, WAS INDEED THE BEST BAND OF THE 21 ST CENTURY. PREDICTION:

DENOTATION & ASSOCIATIONS A solid and reasonable argument that opposes or disagrees with your claim. Nonlinguistical, Analogy, Metaphor, Simile:

REASONING The Stanford admission’s officer found the student’s reasoning to be incredulous; the student’s belief that he would be accepted to his dream school was based on his flawed reasoning that his dad thought his son was the smartest in Northeast Ohio. PREDICTION:

DENOTATION&ASSOCIATIONS REASONING: THE FOUNDATION OF YOUR ARGUMENT IS THE REASONING YOU USE TO EXPLAIN HOW YOUR EVIDENCE SUPPORTS YOUR CLAIM. COMMENTARY Nonlinguistical, Analogy, Metaphor, Simile:

SOUND Bill Clinton is taller than George W. Bush, and Jimmy Carter is shorter than George W. Bush. Therefore, Bill Clinton is taller than Jimmy Carter. This is a sound argument because the premise or basis and the conclusion are true. PREDICTION:

DENOTATION&ASSOCIATIONS SOUND: A SUCCESSFUL ARGUMENT OF ANY KIND; logical. Nonlinguistical, Analogy, Metaphor, Simile:

SUFFICIENT The reporters knew that the prosecutors would win the case; they had presented a hefty body of evidence, sufficient to support the claim that teachers, especially English teachers, should be worshipped and idolized. PREDICTION:

DENOTATION&ASSOCIATIONS SUFFICIENT: HAVING ENOUGH EVIDENCE TO PROVE A CLAIM. AVOID: 1. CLAIM NOT FOLLOWING LOGICALLY FROM THE EVIDENCE PROVIDED. 2. SPEAKING TOO BROADLY. 3. IGNORING OR NOT ADDRESSING OTHER POSSIBILITIES. Nonlinguistical, Analogy, Metaphor, Simile

RELEVANT The students believed the 2015 report from the United Nations for a stronger education was relevant to Mrs. Golem’s claim that Finnish people have a stronger sense of well-being because they studied math for at least two decades. PREDICTION

DENOTATION&ASSOCIATIONS RELEVANT: Related to the argument, claim Nonlinguistical, Analogy, Metaphor, Simile:

IRRELEVANT The student pleaded his case to the principal, but his pleas were not heard; the evidence he used was emotional and irrelevant and did nothing to help ease his punishment. PREDICTION

DENOTATION&ASSOCIATIONS IRRELEVANT: Unrelated to the argument/claim; does not support the viewpoint, must be excluded. Nonlinguistical, Analogy, Metaphor, Simile:

FRAMEWORK :58 seconds