The World of Writing Vocabulary

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Minnesota Adult Education Fall Regionals 2014 GED WRITING INSTITUTE: CREATING A PLAN FOR INSTRUCTION 2014 MN GED ADVISORY TEAM.
Advertisements

Argument: A text that uses reasonable claims and well researched evidence (instead of emotion) to convince someone of a possible truth.
Persuasive Essay Writing The art of persuading someone to think like you!
Writing an Argumentative Paragraph
Argumentative Essay.
Argument and Persuasion: Claims, Counter-claims, Rebuttals.
The Great Debate! What it is and How to do it!. BASIC TERMS! Debate: a game/discussion in which two opposing teams make speeches to support their arguments.
Persuasive Essay Format: Introduction
An Introduction to Argumentative Writing
Argument Writing. An argument in writing IS DIFFERENT THAN ARGUING WITH A PARENT OR FRIEND.
UNLOCKING THE PERSUASIVE ESSAY Thayer’s “Essay By Numbers” Approach to the Persuasive Essay.
Argumentative Essay Standard: ELAGSE6W1
 An argument is a reasoned, logical way of demonstrating that the writer’s position, belief, or conclusion is valid.  Arguments seek to make people.
BUILDING BODY PARAGRAPHS The first topic sentence of the first paragraph will be the first reason that supports your position. You may even wish to begin.
CLAIM TO THESIS TYPES OF EVIDENCE.  Sometimes in professional essays the claim may be implicit, but in formal essays that you will write for class, the.
Baseline Conclusions & Counter Claims. Counter Arguments - Rebuttals Now, address those arguments in a paragraph explaining why your position is a better.
Recognizing Modes of Persuasion Objective: I will learn to recognize and apply rhetorical strategies.
Argumentative Writing
Into the Wild Essay Outline
Argumentative Writing
THE ARGUMENTATIVE OR PERSUASIVE ESSAY Mr.Wilson – LMAC - English.
Argumentation The act or process of giving reasons for or against something. The act or process of making and presenting arguments.  MAKING A CLAIM 
Writing the Argumentative Essay. CHOOSING A TOPIC To begin an argumentative essay, you must first have an opinion you want others to share.
Writing the Argumentative/Persuasive Essay. What is an Argumentative Essay? The purpose of an argumentative essay is to persuade the reader to accept—or.
Argument Writing Grade 7 Copyright © 2015 by Write Score LLC.
What it is and How to do it!
Argumentative writing
ARGUMENTATIVE WRITING Essential Question: Can I write arguments with clear reasoning and relevant evidence?
Argument Writing Grade 8 Copyright © 2015 by Write Score LLC.
The Do’s and Don’ts Argumentative Writing. Why learn to write an argument? Being able to write an argument helps you to become a logical communicator.
I can write to tell my opinion. W.K.1 12Pre-K3Kindergarten4 1 st Grade Introduction No attemptDraw a picture of a story Tell the topic or name of the book.
Persuasive Essays English I & II Composition of a persuasive essay.
Argumentative Essay with a Counterargument. Argumentative Essay  Your Salem Witch essay is a one-sided argument  Your thesis statement answers the question:
Argumentative Essay outline. Introduction (4-5 sentences) 1.HOOK 2.Introduce the issue: Briefly explain the issue and the controversy surrounding the.
Argument Writing Key Characteristics of an Argument Essay.
How to write it effectively for the Social Studies.
Writing the Argumentative/Persuasive Essay. CHOOSING A TOPIC To begin an argumentative/persuasive essay, you must first have an opinion you want others.
ENG 113: Composition I.  Variation of “thesis-and-support” essay  State a position on a topic  Support your position  Special concerns  Structure.
Argumentation The act or process of giving reasons for or against something. The act or process of making and presenting arguments. MAKING A CLAIM CHALLENGING.
Writer’s Workshop Argument Essay.
Argument Writing Structure Essentials.
Argument vocabulary Purpose (Noun) Persuade (Verb) Audience (Noun)
Toulmin Method of Logic
Argumentative Writing
Persuasion vs. Argumentation Claim Reason Evidence Warrant
Argumentative Essay Mr. Gambler’s 8th ELA.
Defining Argument Writing
Argumentative Writing
The POWER of PERSUASION
Writing an Argument Thesis
The argumentative essay
Elements of an Argument
Argumentative Essay Revision Ideas
The argumentative essay
What is an ARGUMENT? An argument is a reasoned, logical way of demonstrating that the writer’s position, belief, or conclusion is valid. Arguments seek.
How to Write an Introduction
EXPLANATORY WRITING.
The Art of Argumentation
FOR TEACHERS Monday – Focus on exposing students to vocabulary, getting definitions, and practicing Tuesday – Slip or Trip activity to begin practicing.
Argumentative writing
Argumentative writing
Vocabulary for Argumentative Paragraph
Making a Persuasive Case
Journal What do you think makes for a good speech/speaker? List and explain at least three things.
Writing Persuasively Argument Essay.
Argumentative writing
Argument Essay Notes.
How to Write an Argumentative Essay
Components of an Argument
How to Build a Strong Argument
Presentation transcript:

The World of Writing Vocabulary With your table, complete the crossword puzzle: Argument Claim Concluding Sentence Counterargument Evidence Explanatory Informational Persuasive Rebuttal Supporting Details Topic Sentence ACTIVITY (pg 1)- Start with establishing common writing vocabulary with the crossword puzzle

Argument writing is… An argument is a formal presentation of evidence that supports a particular claim or position. It requires critical thinking and rhetorical production involving: Claim Evidence that connect the thesis, evidence, and situation within which the argument being made. So we all have the same language, for the purposes of the GED, we’ll use this definition of argument writing. If this is useful: In student-friendly language, argument writing is formal writing that demonstrates critical-thinking through presentation of evidence to support a claim or position.

4 Building Blocks of an effective argument Claim Evidence Counterclaim (addresses potential objections to the claim) Rebuttal Review these terms (but don’t define them) and then for each following slide elicit responses from participants

Claim (thesis statement) Clearly identifies a topic States what point is being made (argued) Contains a position on the topic Creates a roadmap for the writing – “what am I trying to prove?” Usually positioned in the introduction NOTE – Claim has 2 slides

Claim (thesis statement) A claim must be - Debatable: Reasonable people could disagree - Narrow: Not too big (in scope) to deal with - Valid: Evidence is available to support the claim A note about claims…

Evidence (data) Supports the claim; NOT personal opinions but information from reliable sources that may include: Facts or statistics Expert opinions Concrete example Evidence: Quotes & paraphrases from the text; what do you see?

Counterclaim (opposing argument) Disagrees with the claim Reasonable people can disagree with a specific claim what do they think? (their claim) what is their evidence? This can also be called the counter-argument

Rebuttal (evidence) Explains why the counterclaim is wrong A person can reasonably disagree with the counterclaim Why is the counterclaim wrong? (faulty logic) What evidence supports why a counterclaim is wrong or less effective? This may also be called refutation Handout (pg 3)– Argument Writing Vocabulary Sheet

If we put it all together our students will be able to write a full well-supported evidence-based argument complete with counterclaim & rebuttal. This is our GOAL – to be able to guide your students through a process of strategies and activities so they can do something like this on their own. This graphic organizer is a tool that may help your students be able to organize their ideas to present the argument well. It’s simple enough that it may be a tool they choose to use during their real test to organize their ideas/information on their “personal erasable board.”

Crime and Puzzlement (Book 1, p. 22) By Lawrence Treat ACTIVITY – Solve the Crime & Puzzlement picture Most students aren’t ready to jump right into writing an argument and even identifying evidence can be challenging for them. One helpful way to get them started in the right direction is to use pictures. Through this you can lead students in a discussion about what really is evidence and what evidence is useful and what is irrelevant or invalid.

Who killed Amy LaTour? Amy LaTour’s body was found in her bedroom last night, as shown, with her pet canary strangled in its cage. Henry Willy and Joe Wonty, her boyfriends; Louis Spanker, a burglar, known to have been in the vicinity; and Celeste, her maid, were questioned by the police. Based on the evidence found at the scene, who killed Amy? Amy LaTour’s body was found in her bedroom last night, as shown, with her pet canary strangled in its cage. Hery Willy and Joe Wonty, her boyfriends; Louis Spanker, a burglar, known to have been in the vicinity; and Celeste, her maid, were questioned by the police. Based on the evidence found at the scene, who killed Amy?

Definitions Examples Evidence Warrants Conclusions Evidence Warrants Observable data either physical or reliably reported Warrants Common sense rules, general statements about how people and things behave Conclusions Reasoning that must be supported with evidence and warrants Evidence There are flowers “From Joe” and a picture of Joe on display Warrants Generally when flowers and a picture are on display, the person is special Conclusions Therefore Joe is special to Amy Discuss other evidence and solve the mystery.