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They Say, I Say. Chapter 4: Yes/No/Okay, But. Three Ways to Respond. The three most common and recognizable ways to respond are to: Agree Disagree Agree and disagree simultaneously Doing so will allow your reader to place your response on a mental map of familiar choices.
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They Say, I Say Chapter 4: Yes/No/Okay, But
Three Ways to Respond • The three most common and recognizable ways to respond are to: • Agree • Disagree • Agree and disagree simultaneously • Doing so will allow your reader to place your response on a mental map of familiar choices.
Why Tell Your Response? • Before giving support for your ideas, it is important to clearly state your position. • A response or interpretation is always responding to other opinions or interpretations.
Disagree–and explain why • It is not enough to simply claim that you disagree; you need to provide persuasive reasons as to why you disagree. • Providing a “why” allows you to prove you have something to contribute to the conversation.
Ways to Disagree • The “alternative” response: disagreeing with the claims and showing how they are wrong. • The “twist it” response: agreeing with the evidence provided, but showing how it actually supports your own opinion.
Agree-but with a difference • It is not enough to simply agree with others; you need to also add something new to the conversation. • It is important to open up some difference between your position and the one your agreeing with (don’t parrot the ideas of others). • Some options: • You can apply what the author says to another context (time, location, etc.). • You can discuss reasons, important evidence, or implications that the author didn’t bring up.
Agree and Disagree Simultaneously • Agreeing and disagreeing simultaneously allows you to provide a complex argument. • It allows your reader to easily place your opinion on the mental map of positions, while still allowing a thoughtful response.
Ways to Agree and Disagree • The “stress” response: including agreement and disagreement, but stressing the importance of one over the other. • The “mixed feelings” response: showing the “pros” and “cons” of a position without decisively being for or against.