This document provides a study guide for an Advanced Academic Writing final exam, summarizing 38 key terms related to argumentation, rhetoric, and academic writing. It covers components of rhetorical analysis like the rhetorical triangle of author, audience, and text. It also defines and explains different types of arguments like argument to inquire, argument to persuade, and argument to convince. Additional topics covered include logical fallacies, audience analysis, peer-reviewed sources, tone, voice, and structures for organizing compare/contrast and cause-and-effect arguments.
This document provides a study guide for an Advanced Academic Writing final exam, summarizing 38 key terms related to argumentation, rhetoric, and academic writing. It covers components of rhetorical analysis like the rhetorical triangle of author, audience, and text. It also defines and explains different types of arguments like argument to inquire, argument to persuade, and argument to convince. Additional topics covered include logical fallacies, audience analysis, peer-reviewed sources, tone, voice, and structures for organizing compare/contrast and cause-and-effect arguments.
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Advanced Academic Writing Final Exam Flashcards _ Quizlet
This document provides a study guide for an Advanced Academic Writing final exam, summarizing 38 key terms related to argumentation, rhetoric, and academic writing. It covers components of rhetorical analysis like the rhetorical triangle of author, audience, and text. It also defines and explains different types of arguments like argument to inquire, argument to persuade, and argument to convince. Additional topics covered include logical fallacies, audience analysis, peer-reviewed sources, tone, voice, and structures for organizing compare/contrast and cause-and-effect arguments.
This document provides a study guide for an Advanced Academic Writing final exam, summarizing 38 key terms related to argumentation, rhetoric, and academic writing. It covers components of rhetorical analysis like the rhetorical triangle of author, audience, and text. It also defines and explains different types of arguments like argument to inquire, argument to persuade, and argument to convince. Additional topics covered include logical fallacies, audience analysis, peer-reviewed sources, tone, voice, and structures for organizing compare/contrast and cause-and-effect arguments.
existing arguments, as part of the process of Argument to inquire arriving at the truth as you see it; ask questions, informal, what do I think?
Persuasion moves people to act by combining
Argument to persuade logical argument with emotional appeals
To seek approval or agreement to a claim not
Argument to convince directly tied to taking action; need to share and agree, data, reasons, think my thoughts
Used to find common ground and agreement on a
course of action when parties dispute are in a Argument to mediate sharp and seemingly irreconcilable conflict; find the middle ground, agree to disagree
Information about the time and place the work
Rhetorical context was written, about the author, who published it, and the ongoing debate to which it contributed Advanced Academic Writing Final Exam A serious "conversation" where opinions are both Study
offered and examined critically, often through a
Dialectical thinking process of questioning; relates to inquiry argument, multiple voices
Unity "Big picture." Does the essay stay on topic?
Little pieces fitting together. Do sentences in the
Coherence paragraph relate to the topic sentence?
Also called "thesis," the central statement an
argument defends, the belief or action you want Claim your audience to accept. A claim is your carefully stated and more specific version of your opinion about something
A sentence saying why a claim should be
Reason accepted as true
Reasoning, data, and expert opinion advanced to
Evidence justify or confirm a reason. Need to consider degree of resistance from audience.
Principles or values an argument takes for granted
Assumption and so does not state or defend. Need to examine and expose these assumptions.
Acknowledging the strength of one's claim. Words
Qualifier that provide exceptions, limits, or clarifies the claim
Counterargument Potential objections to opinion
Answering others' argument. Make sure to have
Rebuttal "built in answers to nay-sayers" for your argument. Advanced Academic Writing Final Examof a legitimate form of appeal, The misuse Study Logical Fallacy sometimes with the intent to deceive
Personal Attack Undermining someone, "name-calling"
Reasoning that misleads by confusing sequence
False Cause with cause ex.) lightbulb, is it the bulb or switch?
Terrorists for example. More likely to die from a
Fear car crash, but we are more worried about terrorist plots
Generalization based on an unrepresentative
Hasty Generalization sample, which results in a generalization that is false
A subject matter. Typically arguments are
Topic restricted to some part of a topic, and often to a single issue related to it
A controversial question connected to a subject
Issue matter or topic
A central statement an argument defends, the
Thesis statement belief or action you want your audience to accept
Audience Analysis: Race, gender, class, age, etc.
Demographics
Audience Analysis: What do they know? What do they think about
Psychology your topic? What do they believe?
Method of delivery, physical location, why are
Audience Analysis: Situation they there? Advanced Academic Writing Final Exambook by one writer, on one subject, A detailed Study Monographs with one point of view
Many different essays but many different people,
Anthologies relating to one topic or issue (usually)
Specific subject or study done by experts related
Peer-reviewed periodicals to that specific field. Published periodically.
In arguments, needs to be slightly more formal
than when you talk to people. This results in Voice "conversational prose." Voice needs to be adapted to subject matter, audience, purpose, etc. Personality of writing
Tone Attitude toward subject matter or audience
The use of humor, irony, or ridicule to expose and
Satire criticize people's stupidity or vices (critique)
Meaning of a word, general understanding, what
Definition argument the word is not, give various meanings, bring in expert opinion
Cause has many effects
Causes have one effect Ways to order this argument 1. Chronological Cause and Effect argument 2. Domino/causality 3. Start or end with most powerful point (emphatic) 4. What's at stake? So what? Advanced Academic Writing Final WaysExam to order this argument Study Compare and Contrast 1. Point by point argument 2. Block