Stand On Issues Supported by Factual Evidences
Stand On Issues Supported by Factual Evidences
Supported by
Factual Evidences
English for Academic and
Professional Purposes
What I Need to Know
After going through this module, you are
expected to:
Defend a stand on an issue by presenting
reasonable arguments supported by
properly cited factual evidences.
(CS_EN11/12A-EAPP-IIa-d-4
opinion vs. argument
Supported Facts
and
Unsupported Facts
facts not supported with evidence
Example:
Many students seek assistance
with their writing skills at
university.
facts supported with evidence
Example:
Wonderland University (2016, p. 36) reports that
during the academic year, lecturers recommended
that 396 internal and 267 external students should
seek assistance with their writing.
facts not supported with evidence
Example:
Writing academic paragraphs is
the most important skill in
academic writing.
facts supported with evidence
Example:
The Australian Association of Essay Writing (2012,
p. 129) claims that their research in five universities
shows that students are required to write
academic paragraphs in 90% of their assessment
tasks.
3 most common
1.Quotations ways to support
(e.g. direct quotes, your claims
paraphrases, summaries)
2. Examples 3.Statistics
(e.g. illustrations of your (e.g. facts, figures,
points) diagrams)
In its research project, the
Literacy Foundation (2014, p.
167) argues that “common
punctuation errors cause
problems with meaning-making
1.Quotations
in student writing”.
(e.g. direct quotes,
paraphrases, summaries)
Many student writers have
difficulty with some aspects
of punctuation. For example,
researchers (George et al.,
2016; Jones & Brown, 2013;