PA#7
Please note (IMPORTANT)
My upcoming absence from class on Friday necessitates some changes in the syllabus, so here goes:
By Sunday at 5 PM, blog a paragraph-length response to the following topic. Bring a hard copy of the paragraph to class on Monday.
The topic:
Draft a paragraph length response to ONE of the author's sub-arguments. Don't try to respond to his entire thesis. Choose instead one of his supporting arguments as the topic for your paragraph.
Either support or refute his supporting argument in your paragraph.
Your paragraph might take the following form, depending on whether you are confirming or refuting:
Confirming:
1. State the writer's supporting argument.
2. Explain it briefly. You might want to work in a short, phrase length quotation to show that you are summarizing the argument accurately.
3. State your response.
4. Explain it. (Develop the writer's argument in support of it.)
5. Provide some evidence from an outside source that your claim is true. Alternatively, you could develop the writer's example or analogy with an example or analogy of your own. Another alternative is to show that the writer's example or analogy is a true representation of his or her argumentative claim.
Refuting:
1. State the writer's supporting argument.
2. Explain it briefly. You might want to work in a short, phrase length quotation to show that you are summarizing the argument accurately.
3. State your response.
4. Explain it. (Develop the writer's argument in support of it.)
5. Alternatively, you could counter the writer's example or analogy with an
example or analogy of your own. Another alternative is to show that the
writer's example or analogy is a false representation of his or her
argumentative claim.
Two things to keep in mind:
1. Provide appropriate transitional devices from TSIS to indicate where the paragraph is moving.
2. Show. Don't tell. Don't evaluate the writer's argument. Don't respond to the writer. Respond to the argument in a reasoned and unemotional way. Don't write that the argument is true or false. Don't even refer to the argument. State it, explain it, and move on the your response.
Don't characterize the argument or the writer. Avoid name calling. Don't write that the argument is "bull," for example. Show the strengths or flaws in the argument instead.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Monday, September 15, 2014
PA#6 They Say, Part 3 (Summarizing)
Read Carl Singleton's short essay on pp. 192 -94 of WFS and Bagaric and Clark's essay on pp. 196 - 199. Summarize one essay's main arguments in a paragraph.
Write carefully. Your paragraph will become the basis for your next essay.
The author's name and the title of the essay should appear somewhere in the first sentence. Early on, you should summarize or quote the main idea of the essay.
After that, summarize the main arguments that Singleton uses to support that main idea. Note that you are writing only a summary paragraph. Don't evaluate any of the ideas in the essay.
Note also that you must choose wisely the ideas that you decide to write about. Please concern yourself with the main facets of the argument and not the details and examples. (You may eventually have to comment on the details and examples in other paragraphs of the essay you will have to write. Don't use them in this particular paragraph.)
By Tuesday (9/16/13) at 5 PM, blog the paragraph. We'll look at some of them in class on Wednesday (9/17).
Bring your paragraph to class on Wednesday (9/17/14).
Read Carl Singleton's short essay on pp. 192 -94 of WFS and Bagaric and Clark's essay on pp. 196 - 199. Summarize one essay's main arguments in a paragraph.
Write carefully. Your paragraph will become the basis for your next essay.
The author's name and the title of the essay should appear somewhere in the first sentence. Early on, you should summarize or quote the main idea of the essay.
After that, summarize the main arguments that Singleton uses to support that main idea. Note that you are writing only a summary paragraph. Don't evaluate any of the ideas in the essay.
Note also that you must choose wisely the ideas that you decide to write about. Please concern yourself with the main facets of the argument and not the details and examples. (You may eventually have to comment on the details and examples in other paragraphs of the essay you will have to write. Don't use them in this particular paragraph.)
By Tuesday (9/16/13) at 5 PM, blog the paragraph. We'll look at some of them in class on Wednesday (9/17).
Bring your paragraph to class on Wednesday (9/17/14).
Thursday, September 11, 2014
PA#5 -- They Say, Part 3 (Confirmation/ Downshifting)
PA#5 -- They Say, Part 3 (Confirmation/ Downshifting)
Please blog the assignment by Sunday (9/14/14) at 5 PM. Bring a hard copy to class on Monday 9/15.
The assignment:
Look at your notes from other classes. Find some small claim made by the professor in that class. I emphasize the word "small" here. You're writing only a paragraph and not an entire essay.
Use the following pattern: (I know. But we have to start somewhere.)
1. Claim
2. Explanation
3. Bridge
4. Evidence with ICR (introductory citational remark)
5.Application (of the evidence to the explanation of the claim
State the claim. Explain it. Then, provide evidence to support it. Integrate the source material well. Don't forget to use transitions from TSIS, and introduce evidence using an ICR (more on that in class). You don't have to include a bibliography -- yet.
Note that your opinion is valid here, but it does not argue. You need to build an argument with evidence from valid sources. Use them in the paragraph.
Thursday, September 4, 2014
PA#4
PA#4: They Say . . . (part 2)
For your fourth paragraph, consider a single piece of advice or evaluation about college that somebody gave you before you came to college. State that advice and explain it briefly. Based on your very limited experience, comment that advice or evaluation. Was it true? Did it help as you started your college career?
Here's an example of a possible topic: My daddy told me that I was starting a new life. I could remake myself any way I wanted. I took that advice to heart. I had been a nerd, an awkward, anti-social geek. By the end of orientation, I was Mr. Popularity because I remade myself. In a paragraph I would explain all that in detail and then briefly tell the story of the single event that helped others to see me in that light.
As you write, consider using some of the transitional devices in TSIS. Their use will help you to construct a fully developed and well organized paragraph.
We'll review some of the paragraphs on Friday, 9/12, so please get them on the blog by Thursday, 9/11 at 5 PM.
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
PA#3
PA#3: They say . . .
Consider one element of Hohn's talk that you think needs to be developed in more detail. Your topic could be anything he said, but make the focus narrow enough that you can write a single, well developed paragraph.
You don't have to agree with him to provide support for his argument. Just do it whether you agree or disagree. In this assignment we're learning to agree and expand, not to rebut and refute.
Your general organization of the paragraph might be as follows:
1. What Hohn said (his specific sub-argument). (Don't forget to include his full name and the circumstances under which he gave his talk.)
2. An explanation of his point of view, which might take more than one sentence
3. Your point of view on what he said (Try to develop rather than repeat his point of view.)
4. An explanation of your point of view, which might take more than one sentence
5. Some evidence from an outside source that supports your point of view
Post your comment by Tuesday, 9/9 at 5 PM.
NOTE: If for some truly unavoidable reason you cannot attend Hohn's lecture, please see me after class on Friday so that we can figure out a substitute assignment. We will be engaging in that process one-on-one, and every assignment will be different. Please do not try to substitute another assignment without talking it over with me.
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