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Argumentative Essay Infographic

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Created on December 21, 2021

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Transcript

Step-by-Step

Argumentative Essay

The Claim & Introduction

Decide what your stance on the issue is. Write it in ONE sentence. Write your introduction paragraph and make your CLAIM the last sentence in that paragraph.

+ info

Body Paragraphs

Support Paragraph

+ ino

Counter-claim

Support Paragraph

Conclusion

Do not introduce any new information in the conclusion. Summarize what you already said and provide some sort of "call to action" for your reader.

Step 3: Write Counterclaim

Step 1: Write Intro w/ Claim

Step 2: Body Paragraphs - Supporting Paragraphs

Step 4: Write conclusion

The Claim & Introduction

What is a claim?

It is ONE sentence that can be proven. Sometimes, you may hear the word "thesis" instead of claim.

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For more information about claims, click the button.

What does an introduction have?

General Statements & Background Information

Hook

Claim

For more information on introduction paragraphs, click the button.

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Body Paragraphs

Supporing paragraphs

Outline

It's a good idea to write an outline so you know what will go where in your essay..

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Click the button to the left for a outline template.

What is included in the body?

facts

statistics

quotes

The body paragraphs are where you prove your claim is true. This is where you argue your point. Do that with things like statistics, facts, quotes from experts, anecdotes, etc...

Writing your paragraphs

If you need help with the body paragraphs, click the button below.

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Body Paragraphs

The Counteclaim

What is a counterclaim?

This is where you aknowledge the opposition's view and explain why it's not as good as your view.

What do you do?

+ info

What will the opposite view say?

Argue against that.

More on Counterclaims

For a video explaining counterclaims, click below.

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The Conclusion

Time to wrap it up!

Don't rush your conslusion just because you want to be done writing. Include the items below in your conclusion, but do NOT add new information or ideas.

What to include:

Revisit the thesis statement, but write it differently.

Summarize your main points.

Provide a "call to action." What should your audience do now?

For more help...

For a video about writing conclusion, click below!

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