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3.12 Evaluating Evidence
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CONNECTION House of Cards—something built on an unsound foundation
Build a house of cards and it falls down easily. In fourth grade you learned that writing an essay is like constructing a building. Essayists cement together a variety of reasons and evidence. Without a solid foundation, your argument will collapse.
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TEACHING POINT Today I want to teach you that some reasons and evidence are better than others. To be sure you have the strongest possible reasons and evidence, it helps to ask “How do I know?” and be sure you can give precise, exact answers.
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TEACHING EVALUATING OTHERS’ ARGUMENTS CAN HELP YOU EVALUATE YOUR OWN REASONING Scene from Legally Blonde—you need to think like a lawyer! How do we do this? Evaluate the arguments of others. Ask “How do you know?”
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ACTIVE ENGAGEMENT People in a town gathered for a town meeting to discuss whether it is a good idea for the town to build a skateboard park. People spoke for both sides. I’m going to hand each partnership a stack of things people said at the meeting, sometimes for and sometimes against the skate park. Go through the statements together and weigh the arguments.
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ACTIVE ENGAGEMENT What reasoning did you use to evaluate an argument as strong or weak? Why did you make the choices you did?
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TEACHING Common Flaws in Reasoning
Generalizing (assumes specific example will be true everywhere) Discrediting (insults people’s character rather than taking issue with their points) Assuming consequences (implies cause-and-effect relationship that isn’t proven) Questionable Assumption (argument founded on something that might not be true)
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LINK Look at your own arguments. Are you building a house of cards or a house of stone?
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