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Published byXavier Newnam Modified over 9 years ago
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Persuasive—Argue your point 4-6 Paragraphs Introduction Main Body Paragraphs Supporting Points Address counterpoint(s) Conclusion
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Attention Getter Put the issue in context—WHY DOES IT MATTER? Mention main counter argument Thesis (Position Statement) and the main supporting points
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Claim/Support Specific Details/Examples Prove counterpointincorrect/unimportant Prove counterpoint incorrect/unimportant Why it is important/how does it supportyour position (clincher) Why it is important/how does it support your position (clincher)
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1. Address the greater importance1. Address the greater importance 2. Predict what would happen if yourposition is correct OR what wouldhappen if the opposite position won 2. Predict what would happen if your position is correct OR what would happen if the opposite position won 3. Be specific, strong, and interesting—DO NOT REPEAT 3. Be specific, strong, and interesting— DO NOT REPEAT
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Grading Rubric 6 = effective 5 = competent 4 = adequate 3 = developing 2 = weak 1 = off topic, illegible, or blank (0)
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Realize what the question is asking Take a position Address the prompt
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Consider the complexity of the issue by examining different perspectives Addressing the counterarguments
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Full—range of examples Example:history, politics, literature, current events, etc. All supporting your position Specific—very detailed examples Using proper names, dates, etc. Explain WHY supports your argument
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Every main point is relevant to yourposition Every main point is relevant to your position Every specific detail is relevant toyour main point Every specific detail is relevant to your main point Explain why they all support yourposition Explain why they all support your position
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Sentences are varied Word choice varied and precise Spelling and grammatical errors arelimited and do not distract reader Spelling and grammatical errors are limited and do not distract reader Be convincing, interesting and specific (use logos, pathos, anecdotes, quotes, questions, etc.)
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2-5 minutes of planning (Read prompt carefully; know what it is asking) T chart then outline (brief) your ideas 25 minutes to write (stop periodically and read what you have written) Cross out and/or add as needed FINISH!
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