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English 1302: Week Ten. Writing the Researched Argument. Class Exercise: Enthymeme . On a piece of paper, complete the following using your thesis draft: First, write out the MAJOR PREMISE (Large, general assumption informing your thesis claim)
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English 1302: Week Ten Writing the Researched Argument
Class Exercise: Enthymeme • On a piece of paper, complete the following using your thesis draft: • First, write out the MAJOR PREMISE (Large, general assumption informing your thesis claim) • Next, write out the MINOR PREMISE (specific statement that follows logically from the MAJOR PREMISE) • Last, form a CONCLUSION (arguable claim that works from the MAJOR AND MINOR PREMISE) • Examples: • MAJOR PREMISE: Crooks should not be elected to public office (general belief/assumption) • MINOR PREMISE: Ed is a crook. (statement) • CONCLUSION: Ed is a crook and therefore should not be elected to office. • MAJOR PREMISE 2: Governments are responsible for the health of their citizens • MINOR PREMISE 2: Smoking in public endangers the health of bystanders. • CONCLUSION 2: Government should ban smoking in confined public places.
Class Overview • Enthymeme Exercise • Argument Structure and Requirements • Paragraph-Level Structure • The Language of Textual Support • Logical Claims and Fallacies • Thesis Workshop
Researched Argument: Reminders • Your argument 2.1 (due April 12) must: • Have an identifiable thesis that 1) makes an arguable claim on a scholarly topic and 2) provides clear, logical reasons (“why”) in support • Use “should,” “must,” or “would” in the thesis • NOT be written in the first-person (this is still a scholarly work: stick to arguing the logic/evidence and not your informal or personal views) • Be 1500 words minimum in length • Should organize body paragraphs around REASONS (one per paragraph) that support the CLAIM • Contain a counterargument and rebuttal section: this can be done in one paragraph, but I HIGHLY ADVISE doing it in two: one paragraph of summary of the counterargument source, and the other considering and rebutting the counterargument source. Don’t generalize the source: respond to its actual claims. • Employ logical evidence and lines of argumentation throughout (should be clear of fallacies or undeveloped thinking) • Utilize at least SIX scholarly sources as textual support • Remember: your argument is only as strong as its reasoning. • Ask: is this a claim a reasonable person would make?
Paragraph-Level Structure • Whereas the literature review usually requires you to examine evidence that “builds” toward a synthesis claim, the researched argument can begin from the claim and follow through with evidence and logic: • EX: (Thesis claim: Primary schools in the United States should lower the number of state-wide student assessments ) • TOPIC SENTENCE (REASON): Content-based questions cannot fully prepare students for the critical and procedural thinking required by the job force and higher education. • UNPACK REASONING/ASSUMPIONS: When content is stressed over procedural knowledge, learning and retention is less effective because content in many subjects is variable, encouraging arbitrary memorization as opposed to critical understanding. • PROVIDE EVIDENCE: In recent studies, upper-level high school students who were taught a content-heavy curriculum showed dramatic decreases at two and three years after the duration of their study compared to a control of procedurally taught students (Zimmerman 123). (REPEAT AS NECESSARY) • CONNECT EVIDENCE LOGIC: Major issues in retention like these threaten the validity of content-based assessments. If U. S. schools emphasize content over procedure, they not only negate the purpose of most curricula but also run the risk of squandering time and economic resources . • EXPAND AS NECESSARY • CONCLUDING/OUTCOME STATEMENT: Because content focus demonstrably detracts from retention and comprehension, such assessments pose too great an educational risk to remain the logical center of state curricula.
The Language of Textual Support • In an argument, YOU are making the claims that you will then back with researched evidence • Whereas in the literature review you focused on what “researchers were saying” at the sentence level (e. g. “Researcher B contends that X is true”), the researched argument does the opposite: • ARGUMENT EXAMPLE: Genetic modification of seeds has led to economically unfair practices that allow corporations to manipulate intellectual property law to the disadvantage of foreign landowners (Stockhausen 22). • LIT REVIEW EXAMPLE: Stockhausen et al. argue that the genetic modification of seeds does____ (22). Their findings also suggest that unfair practices may lead to wide-scale abuse, although some researchers like Weber contend that basic law and not IP law should account for these potential issues. • Remember to focus on the claim and the logic: support claims that depend on research with appropriate in-text citations (author’s name and page number).
Logical Fallacies Identify the problems with the following claims: • Weber’s finding conflicts Stockhausen’s research, but because Weber is not a specialist, his research is not valid. • If “vaping” contains ingredients common to cigarettes, its health effects will carry the same detriment. • Paper testing cannot assess procedural thinking because of its format. • If inaugural female leaders like Merkel have earned enough support for reelection, then a similar level of support can be expected in the United States. • All educators value discipline, and so it would be detrimental to eliminate enforcement of late penalties and social propriety. • Because e-cigarettes put off a minor amount of harmful chemicals, banning their public use could set a precedent that would allow the banning of other minor chemical exposures, possibly leading to further penalties on alcohol.
Tips and Tricks for Arguments • Keep your reasons (topic sentences) logically connected and ordered with the strongest first. • Make sure that your claims are reasonable by using qualification (be sparing, though!): stating that “all poetry encourages subversion through rhyme” is a very different claim from “Some poetic forms challenge belief through direct comparison and rhyme.” • Even evidence is vulnerable to logical attack: make sure your sources match your claims closely without any need for serious “doctoring” or “hedging.” • Show confidence by avoiding hesitant claims and excessive passive voice • Don’t trust your reader to share the same cultural assumptions: all assumptions need to be clear and accountable. • Don’t dismiss or “drop” evidence to the contrary: account for it carefully. Signs of “suppressed” evidence can make anyone look “guilty.”
Thesis Workshop • Using the enthymeme exercise, try revising your thesis claim in three different ways: • Using “should” as the main verb • Using “must” as the main verb • Using “would” as the main verb • Next, come up with two reasons why your audience “should” believe your claim. Pitch these to your group (1-4) people and decide: • Which version is most effective • Which reasons are most logical and why
Homework FOR RAIDERWRITER: • Go over Reading 11 (in RW) CAREFULLY for class next week. FOR CLASS (WORTH 8 POINTS PARTICIPATION CREDIT): • Bring with you (PRINTED together: no credit for late or unprinted work) a polished draft of: • Your thesis • Your counterargument and rebuttal sections (two FULL paragraphs). • You will want to bring your counterargument source as well.