Providing you with resources to do more, be more, achieve more.
How Much Will You Achieve?
Search
Search Only:

Search Keyword argument

Total: 17 results found.

... to try to eliminate as many of those as you can. Try to vary your sentence length and word choice. Before you begin to write, spend a few minutes brainstorming ideas and outlining the argument ...
... you think he was wrong or right in his claims. In this vein, if you are presenting a topic that is controversial, you must acknowledge counter arguments without sounding arrogant. Will a ...
...  The role of topic sentences Learn how to take the most of your sources Making others' work part of your argument . Tips on writing a coherent paper Framing and structuring your ...
... "good," "bad," "nice," "important," "vivid," and "thing". If those are the only words you can use to express what you're saying, it's likely not subtle enough to make for a very good argument.  ...
... with no specific argument. Once you know exactly what your argument is, your structure will be crucial to the techniques you use to make it. The sequential method - This means discussing all of text ...
Term Paper Help Center Building Your Argument Part Three: Strategy Now that you've done some good analysis within your paragraphs, it's necessary to examine how they fit in to the goal of your overall ...
Term Paper Help Center Building Your Argument Part Two: Integrating Sources The meat and potatoes of your body paragraphs will be a mixture of textual summary and your analysis of it. Once you've done ...
Term Paper Help Center Building Your Argument Part One: Close Readings Close reading is a term used to describe how you ought to be using your sources. The most important element of close reading is ...
... thesis; in other words, an original interpretation based upon the textual evidence of your source. The first of the following examples illustrates a statement of fact, rather than an argumentative topic ...
... that provides an effective entry into your work. No matter how great your argument is, it will not do much good if no one is enticed into reading it. The two most important functions of your introduction ...
... contain: Your basic argument The blueprint for the organization of your supporting details Developing the Argument Topic versus statement - At the outset of your brainstorming, you will ...
... makes your essay sound like a list instead of a logical argument. For example: Bad: “Volunteering at the local hospital also provided a great deal of useful experience.” Good: “Although working at ...
... that should guide you in constructing your argument. In previous sections, we have cautioned that the criteria we set forth could not be used as steps to be followed, because there was so much overlap ...
... must allow each point to build upon previous points, thereby improving not only your essay's flow but also the overall force of your argument. The purpose of this section is not to delineate one structural ...
... portrait? You cannot write a comprehensive essay that discusses everything you have ever done, but you can aim to offer an argument that details the full range of what you have to offer. If you choose ...
... contain: Your basic argument The blueprint for the organization of your supporting details Developing the Argument Topic versus statement - At the outset of your brainstorming, you ...
... to view what your tools of persuasion are: do you use argumentation and careful reasoning to gain support or do you divide and conquer? The interviewer might call on you to discuss an issue with the other ...