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Argument Essays

Argument Essays. There are a few different kinds of essays, one of those being the ARGUMENT ESSAY. The Essay. Comes from the French word essayer , which means to try. A Well Written Essay:. Has a purpose ( to entertain, to inform, to analyze, to problem-solve… to CONVINCE!)

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Argument Essays

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  1. Argument Essays There are a few different kinds of essays, one of those being the ARGUMENT ESSAY.

  2. The Essay Comes from the French word essayer, which means to try.

  3. A Well Written Essay: • Has a purpose ( to entertain, to inform, to analyze, to problem-solve… to CONVINCE!) • Considers a defined audience (age, education level, etc.) • Has a specific structure and organization • Requires unity and coherence of ideas • Has a definite style (personal and informal or objective and more formal).

  4. A Well Written Essay Continued… • Employs words appropriate to the audience and purpose • Provides a strong introduction to catch the reader’s attention • Develops ideas in an orderly sequence with well-supported evidence • Leads the reader to a logical conclusion that summarizes the main ideas

  5. Formal Essay Structure Remember Me?

  6. Introductory Paragraph • Catches the reader’s interest with a “hook” • Introduces the topic • Provides background information on your topic • States the Thesis- your opinion or position on your topic • Tends to move from general to more specific

  7. Other Viewpoint • May be new to you… • Show the argument(s) that are against your opinion in a separate paragraph following the introduction • This should be quite short • TRANSITION: At the end of this paragraph, agree that these arguments are true, but you will show that your arguments are better!

  8. Body Paragraph • A series of complete paragraphs that develop and support the thesis statement • Each paragraph introduces and supports a main point related to the thesis statement (developing unity) • Each paragraph is complete with a topic sentence, body and concluding sentence

  9. Body Paragraph Cont’d • Paragraphs are linked by transitional words or phrases (eg. furthermore, in summary)that help to ensure coherence • Paragraphs are developed through details, examples, reasons, definition, anecdotes, similarities and differences • Follows the “point/proof method”

  10. Body Paragraph Cont’d • The strongest argument, comparison or example is usually presented in the last paragraph of the body • The body usually consists of at least three paragraphs • Each topic sentence should be unique and effectively link to your thesis

  11. Concluding Paragraph • Ties the important points in the essay together, often using key words from the thesis • Draws a final conclusion • Broadens the topic, emphasizing the importance or relevance • Offers an insight-leaves the reader with something to think about • Does not introduce new ideas or evidence into the paper

  12. Pretend You are a Lawyer… Thesis: My client is INNOCENT! TS #1: He/she has an alibi. Point #1: He/she could not have been at the scene of the crime when it happened. Proof #1: That is because I have phone records stating that he/she was making phone calls from Miami on the date in question. NOTE: Would I convince you that my client was innocent if I just told you the proof without explaining the point? Would you be convinced if I just told you that they had an alibi? Probably NOT!

  13. Transitions What Are They?

  14. Transitions • Contribute to style, organization and clarity • When you use transitions effectively, your writing flows smoothly and naturally, the underlying structure is emphasized and the relationship between ideas is clear

  15. Order in Time In the beginning Afterward Finally Ultimately Meanwhile Since When Whenever At the same time Subsequently Later Similarities/ Differences Similarly In a similar way Likewise In contrast Like/unlike On one hand On the other hand Nevertheless In the same way However Although Categories of Transitions

  16. Example/Explanations For example For instance Such as That is In other words Along with To illustrate Specifically In particular Generally Namely Summary In summary In conclusion Therefore Accordingly Finally Thus Consequently Hence In closing Categories of Transitions

  17. Cause-Effect Because Consequently Since As a result Therefore So Thus For that reason As an effect Adding Ideas In addition Furthermore Also Not only… but also Another Moreover Additionally Equally As well Categories of Transitions

  18. Categories of Transitions • Now create your own list of transitions for the following… • Order of Importance • Order in Space • Emphasis • What did you get?

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