The purpose of writing an argument is to support a claim and/or convince others to think or act in a certain way, to encourage readers or listeners to share the writer's opinion, beliefs, or position. Argument pieces are also known as persuasive writing.
In developing an argument, you must make a claim and supply valid reasons, facts, and expert opinions to support it. Phrases such as I think, the facts show, and the evidence shows all signal arguments.
There are some things to keep in mind when you write to persuade others:
- Audience:
- Who are your readers?
- How will your reader feel about the subject?
- Introduction:
- State your position in the introduction.
- Let your readers know what side of an issue you re taking.
- Body:
- Provide logical reasons, examples, or facts to convince your readers that your position is the correct one.
- Be sure your supporting details are relevant to your position.
- State the opposing arguments, then show why they are weak or unimportant.
- Conclusion:
- Briefly summarize your strongest evidence.
- Don't add any new reasons in the conclusion, but restate your position in a positive, convincing manner.
- Call on your audience to take action based on your arguments.
Let's watch a short video on Critical Reasoning. Take notes on the video...there might be a pop quiz!!
Pop Quiz
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