Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBrett Phillips Modified over 9 years ago
1
Argument Writing
2
Argument
3
What is Argument? To change reader’s point of view To ask the reader to accept the writer’s explanation or evaluation of a concept, issue, or problem
4
An argument influences the reader by using evidence and reasoning to express a point of view and uncover a truth for the reader. Magazines and journal articles are arguments Persuasion aggressively seeks to change the readers’ opinion and stimulate an action based on the authors “truth.” Debate and advertising are forms of persuasion Argument Persuasion
5
Is it argument or persuasion?
6
Elements of Argument Claim Evidence: relevant and verifiable Warrant: explanation of how the evidence supports the claim; often common sense rules, laws, scientific principles or research, and well- considered definitions. Backing: support for the warrant (often extended definitions) Qualifications and Counter-arguments: acknowledgement of differing claims
7
Creating an argument Claim A Miner would be a good mascot selection for our school. Evidence Mascots should be strong or tough and represent the area. They should be something people would be proud to be. Explanation Our area has mining as one of its primary industries, so the choice would represent our area. In addition, miners need to be tough because they do strenuous work—and dangerous work. They work hard to fill a need for people everywhere. That’s something to be proud of.
9
Zombie Argument Claim: zombies make cool parents Evidence: reasons zombies make good parents Less need to be polite Relaxed bedtimes(curfew) Less need to dress neatly Warrant: what we know of zombies (from research) Are there any counter-arguments?
10
Identify the claims, evidence and warrants presented?
11
Choosing an arguable issue Arguments need... An issue An arguer An audience Common ground A forum Audience outcomes Arguments fail with… No disagreement or reason to argue Risky or trivial issues Difficulty establishing common ground Standoffs or fights that result in negative outcomes
12
Pointing words EXAMPLES: this, these, that, those, their, such, her, it, etc. “Children wanted their kiddy-cars to go faster. First, the animal design was done away with. Then off went a couple of the wheels. The two remaining wheels were greatly enlarged and then aligned down the center of the vehicle. Finally, handlebars and footrests were added. These primitive two-wheelers went much faster than the four-wheeled kiddy-cars.” ~ Toys! Wulffson “Riders didn’t even have to leave the saddle to be badly hurt. Their hands and shins were smashed and their knee ligaments ripped when horses twisted beneath them or banged into the rails and walls. Their ankles were crushed when their feet became caught in the starter’s webbing.” ~ Seabiscuit, Hillenbrand
13
Repetition of key words or phrases “She sighed as she realized she was tired. Not tired from work but tired of putting white people first. Tired of stepping off sidewalks to let white people pass, tired of eating at separate lunch counters and learning at separate schools. She was tired of ‘Colored’ entrances, ‘Colored drinking fountains, and ‘Colored taxis. She was tired of getting somewhere first and being waited on last. Tired of ‘separate,’ and definitely tired of ‘not equal.’” ~ Rosa, Giovanni
14
Synonyms and pronouns “Candy is almost pure sugar. It is empty of nutritional value. It is an extravagance. It dissolves in water. It melts in your mouth, not in your hands. It’s the icing on the cake. Candy is so impossibly sweet and good that eating it should be the simplest thing in the world. So how can there be anything of substance to say about it?” ~ Candy and Me, Liftin “Religion was central to Egyptian life from the beginning, and the pharaoh played a key role in its rituals. In life, the ruler was thought to be the son of Ra, the all-powerful sun god.” ~ Secrets of the Sphinx, Giblin
15
Using others’ ideas appropriately Quoting (using the exact words) Summarizing (short, sweet and to the point) Paraphrasing (restating in your own words)
16
Quoting Quoting: using the exact words of another. Words must be placed in quotation marks and the author cited. Why use quotations? when the speaker’s name and reputation add credibility when the phrasing of the quotation is interesting or revealing and cannot be stated another way as effectively Hints: cut quotes to the core and use them like spice, sparingly
17
Summarizing Summarizing: putting the ideas of another in your own words and condensing them. Author must be identified. Summaries Should be shorter than original text Should include the main ideas of the original Should reflect the structure of the original text somewhat Should include important details
18
Paraphrasing Paraphrasing: putting someone else’s ideas in your words but keeping approximately the same length as the original. Paraphrase must be original in both structure and wording, and accurate in representing author’s intent. It can not just be switching out synonyms in the original sentence. Author must be identified.
19
When introducing others’ ideas Put source names either before the idea [Painter insists that the hula hoop can help fight diabetes] or after the idea in parentheses [Others find the idea ridiculous (Smith, Wilson)]. Use vivid and precise verb signals more than “says” or “believes” to show how an author feels or how an idea might relate to other ideas: agrees, recommends, insists, explains Make sure the idea adds to the point you are making. Dropping in unrelated quotes or names diminishes your credibility. SHOW how the idea contributes to YOUR argument.
20
Now you are ready to write your argument
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.