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Today:  20 minutes to finish Fall Assessment  Introduction to “They Say/ I Say” Argument Writing  Tomorrow:  Debate using “They Say/ I Say” format.

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Presentation on theme: "Today:  20 minutes to finish Fall Assessment  Introduction to “They Say/ I Say” Argument Writing  Tomorrow:  Debate using “They Say/ I Say” format."— Presentation transcript:

1 Today:  20 minutes to finish Fall Assessment  Introduction to “They Say/ I Say” Argument Writing  Tomorrow:  Debate using “They Say/ I Say” format  Homework: Think of a debate topic you would like to debate with the class. Bring to class. We will choose one.

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3 Practice and Basic MovesPractice and Basic Moves Think about an activity that you do particularly well  Playing a sport (basketball, football, field hockey, tennis)  Playing an instrument (piano, guitar, flute)  Artwork (drawing, painting, ceramics)  Everyday activities (driving a car, brushing teeth, tying shoes

4 Practice and Basic MovesPractice and Basic Moves Performing this activity depends on:  Having learned a series of complicated moves  Practice and repetition Same applies to writing: Accomplished writers rely on established moves for communicating sophisticated ideas.

5 Entering the ConversationEntering the Conversation Best Academic Writing  Deeply engages in some way with other people’s views “write the voices of others into your text”  You enter a conversation, using what others say (or might say) as a launching pad or sounding board for your own ideas.

6 Entering the ConversationEntering the Conversation  In the real world we make arguments because someone has said or done something (or perhaps not said or done something) and we need to respond  Ex.  “I can’t see why you like the Lakers so much.”  “I agree: it was a great film.”  “That argument is contradictory.”

7 Entering Basic MovesEntering Basic Moves  Without other people’s opinions there would be no reason to challenge, agree with, or otherwise respond –there would be no reason to argue at all.

8 Entering the ConversationEntering the Conversation  To make an impact as a writer you make statements that are:  Logical  Well-supported  Consistent  *ALSO, you must find a way to enter a conversation with others’ views–with something “they say”

9 Entering the ConversationEntering the Conversation  If your argument doesn’t identify the “they say” you are responding to, then it probably won’t make sense:  What you are saying may be clear to the audience, but why you are saying it won’t be

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11 Entering the ConversationEntering the Conversation  Your own argument–the “I say” moment of your text–should always be a response to the arguments of others.  Ex.  “Some say that The Sopranos presents caricatures of Italian Americans. In fact, however, the characters in the series are very complex.

12 Entering the ConversationEntering the Conversation  Templates for agreement:  She argues______, and I agree because_____.  Her argument that ______ is supported by new research showing that _______.

13 Entering the ConversationEntering the Conversation  Template for disagreeing:  While she argues ______, I disagree because_______.  The argument he proposes, while persuasive, is inaccurate because______.

14 Entering the ConversationEntering the Conversation  Template for conceding and rebutting:  He claims that _______, and I have mixed feelings about it. On the one hand, I agree that ______. On the other hand, I still insist that_______.  Although I grant that ____, I still maintain that _____.

15 Example from Letter from Birmingham Jail  “ You deplore the demonstrations taking place in Birmingham. But your statement, I am sorry to say, fails to express a similar concerns for the conditions that brought about the demonstrations. ”  Look back at text… Do you see his rhetorical pattern? They say/ I say?

16 Example  “ My daughter, who goes to Stuyvesant High School only blocks from the former World Trade Center, thinks we should fly the American flag out our window. Definitely not, I say: The flag stands for jingoism and vengeance and war. Katha Pollitt, “ Put Out No Flags ” Who is the “ they ” in this example?

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