Part I: HOW GOOD ARGUMENTS WORK.1. Argue In Real Life.What Argument Is and What Argument Is Not. Recognize Where Argument is Appropriate in Real Life. Argue About Issues that Matter to You. Establish Local Context for an Issue Using the Research Process. Find Your Place Among Others: Negotiate Opposition.
Stake and Defend Your Claim. Vary the Support You Bring to an Argument. Structure Your Argument. Recognize Why Arguments Break Down. Take Ownership of Your Argument.2. Choose an Issue.Determine What Matters to You and Why.
Choose an Issue within a Topic. Define Your Audience. Argue at the Right Moment. Getting Started.3. Develop a Research Plan.Collect a basic reference desk and use encyclopedias profitably. Gather Search Terms.
Use search engines to find Internet sources on the Surface Web and on the Deep Web. Perform keyword queries. Find news sites and use RSS feeds to receive updates. Find and use databases in libraries. Find and use primary, government, and multimedia sources. Find books.4. Evaluate, Read, and Use Resources in Your Writing.
Take Notes, Read Critically, and Evaluate Internet Sites. Take Notes, Read Critically, and Evaluate Articles. Take Notes and Read Books Critically. Take Notes and Evaluate Primary Sources. Introduce and Comment on Sources. Quote and Cite Quotations. Summarize and Cite Summaries. Paraphrase and Cite Paraphrases.
Avoid Plagiarism. Documentation: Works Cited Page.5. Read Critically and Avoid Fallacies.Avoid Fallacies of Choice. Avoid Fallacies of Support. Avoid Fallacies of Emotion. Avoid Fallacies of Inconsistency.
Part II: HOW TO PLAN, STRUCTURE AND DELIVER AN ARGUMENT.6. Negotiate Opposition.Why the Opposition Matters. Resist Easy Generalizations. Listen to Local Voices. Summarize Other Voices Fairly. Value Expertise Over Advocacy.
Avoid Bias When You Summarize. Find Points of Overlap. Respond to Other Views.7. Explore an Issue.Prewrite on Your Issue. Develop an Argument Strategy. Use Definitions.
Discover Causes or Consequences. Present Comparisons. Propose a Solution. Evaluate Your Claim. Write an Exploratory Essay.8. Kinds of Argument.Structure an Argument to Fit Your Purpose.
Toulmin-Based Argument. Middle Ground Argument. Rogerian Argument. Argument Based on a Microhistory.9. Build Arguments.How a Claim Functions. Five Kinds of Claims.
Use Reasons to Support Your Claim. Build Body Paragraphs Around Reasons. Use Qualifiers to Make Your Argument Believable. Justify Your Claim with a Warrant. Use Your Audience to Construct a Warrant. Use Backing to Support a Warrant. Respond to Audience Reservations to Make a Warrant Believable.10.
Support an Argument with Fact (Logos), Credibility (Ethos), and Emotion (Pathos).Field Specific Support. Use All Three General Kinds of Support. Use Support Based on Facts and Research (Logos). Use Support to Establish Your Credibility (Ethos). Use Support to Create Emotion (Pathos).Part III: HOW TO TAKE OWNERSHIP OF YOUR ARGUMENT: A STYLE GUIDE.11.
Enhance Your Argument with Visuals and Humor.What Are Visual Arguments? Read Visual Arguments. Use Humor in Your Argument. When Is Humor Appropriate?12. Develop and Edit Argument Structure and Style.Consider Your Argument's Claim. Introduce Your Opposition. Create Strong Introductions.
Write Memorable Conclusions. Edit and Organize Your Argument's Support. Supply a Strong Title.Part IV: AN ANTHOLOGY OF ARGUMENTS. [FORMATTING OK FOR THIS SECTION?]Intersections: Contemporary Issues and Arguments.SCHOOL/ACADEMIC COMMUNITY.Karoun Demirjian, "What is the Price of Plagiarism?" Sad Gaad, I'll Have Large Fries, a Hamburger, a Diet Coke, and an MBA. Hold the Pickles.
Donald Gratz, The Problem with Performance Pay. Douglass Reeves, Remaking the Grade, From A to D. Tom Regan, The Kindle's Assault on Academia: Amazon Wants to Corner the Textbook Market. But Don't Think It's Gonna Be Easy. Michael J Seiden, For-Profit Colleges Deserve Some Respect. Eric Strand, Let's Sue. Jeffrey Williams, Are.