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Critiquing an Argument

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1) Tries to change the reader's attitudes or beliefs. ... a particularly effective, or particularly inept, section of the essay being critiqued ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Critiquing an Argument


1
Critiquing an Argument
2
An Argument
  • An Argument (Review)
  • 1) Tries to change the readers attitudes or
    beliefs.
  • 2) Tries to get the reader to do something based
    on that change.
  • 3) Deals with an issuea reflection of attitudes
    and opinions, a point of disagreement, a
    statement of opposing points of view.

3
A Critique
  • A critique is a point by point evaluation of an
    essay.
  • A critique should focus on the central idea and
    the main points of the essay being
    evaluatedjudging the logic, accuracy, and
    validity of the central idea and each supporting
    point.
  • A critique should also evaluate the overall
    argument for style, target audience, and overall
    effectiveness.
  • A critique should be written mostly in the
    students own words, but detailed with examples
    from the target essay, documented with
    quotations, and written using 3rd person pronouns
    and present tense verbs.

4
Organization of a Critique
  • I. Introduction
  • a) identifies title, author, general subject
  • b) identifies central idea (claim)
  • c) identifies points which support the central
    idea
  • d) gives an overall judgment of the entire
    argument

5
Organization of a Critique (continued)
  • II. Body Paragraph
  • a) each body paragraph should give details and
    examples about one supporting point
  • b) each point should be evaluated according to
    logic
  • c) each point should be evaluated according to
    accuracy
  • d) each point should be evaluated according to
    validity
  • III. Body Paragraph
  • IV. Body Paragraph

6
Organization of a Critique, continued
  • V. Conclusion
  • brings it all together by relating the points to
    the central idea and giving an overall judgment
    of the effectiveness of the whole
  • identifies the authors target audience
  • evaluates the essays style
  • gives at least one example of a particularly
    effective, or particularly inept, section of the
    essay being critiqued

7
Part One Introduction
  • A critique should begin with a statement that
    identifies the title, the author, and the works
    general subject.
  • The second sentence in your introduction should
    state the works central idea (claim).
  • The claim should be followed by statements
    describing the organization of the work, telling
    what sections the work is divided into, the topic
    of each, and the order in which these sections
    come.
  • The final sentence in your introduction should be
    your overall evaluation of the argument as a
    whole.

8
Part Two The Body Paragraphs
  • Each body paragraph should focus on one
    supporting point of the writers argument. Each
    body paragraph should begin with a topic sentence
    that identifies the point and gives an overall
    evaluation of the point as a support for the
    writers claim.
  • Details about the point should follow (What kind
    of support is given for the point Direct or
    indirect? How/why?).
  • An example, in the form of a quotation, should
    come next. At least one quotation is needed in
    each body paragraph.
  • Finally, the point should be judged specifically
    for its logic (does it make sense?), accuracy (is
    it correct?), and validity (does it apply to the
    claim?).

9
Part Three Conclusion
  • The conclusion brings the entire critique
    together by connecting the central idea (the
    writers claim) with his/her supporting points.
  • You should begin by restating your overall
    evaluation of the whole argument.
  • Next the claim and supporting points should be
    reviewed and related to the overall argument.
  • You should identify the writers target audience.
  • You should comment on the essays style.
  • Finally, you should give an example of an
    especially effective or a particularly inept
    section of the essay.

10
Critiquing an Argument
  • Step One Summarize the Argument (see Section 2)
  • Carefully read the persuasive essay.
  • Annotate the essay, noting the writers claim and
    his/her points of support.
  • Make a formal outline (see St. Martins, pages
    571-575) of the argument put forward by the
    writer in the persuasive essay.
  • Choose quotes from the essay to use as examples.
  • Expand your formal outline into a summary, using
    Formal MLA Style.

11
Critiquing an Argument, continued
  • Step 2 Expand the Summary into a Critique
  • Re-read the persuasive essay.
  • Re-annotate the essay, evaluating the claim and
    supporting points as to logic, accuracy, and
    validity.
  • Comment on the effectiveness of the argument as a
    whole, the style, and the target audience.
  • Expand your summary outline into a critique
    outline.
  • Expand your summary essay into a critique essay
    using Formal MLA Style.

12
An Example
  • An example of a critique of an argument,
    including a sample Formal Outline for Paper 2 and
    a Paper 2 essay using Formal MLA Style, is
    provided in Section 3.
  • To view the example, please click on the sample3
    hyperlink directly below the link for this
    presentation.
  • Pay special attention to the parenthetical quote
    citations and the Work Cited page. Both must be
    completed correctly in order for Paper 2 to be
    accepted.

13
A Critique Checklist
  • A Critique Checklist is provided in Section 3,
    directly below the Assignment for Paper 2.
  • You should go through this checklist carefully,
    applying the questions to your own critique
    before you submit it to your instructor.
  • Remember Paper 2 is a formal essay. You must use
    3rd Person pronouns and write in the present
    tense about the work being summarized.
  • You must use parenthetical citations and do a
    Work Cited page.

14
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