argumentative essay, course project
IntroductionThis week, all the hard work you
argumentative essay, course project
IntroductionThis week, all the hard work you have done in researching your topic and issue will come to fruition in your argumentative paper. Once you feel you have got the final draft, try to put the paper aside, even for a few hours, and then read it again.
Did you address at least three aspects of the issue you chose?
Does each aspect have relevant and authoritative evidence in support of your point?
Have you included a view that is in opposition to your viewpoint, and have you answered that opposing view, pointing out its flaws in such a way as to refute it?
Edit your paper – look for wordiness, repetition, vagueness, ambiguities. Check the organization of the paper as a whole; make sure each paragraph maintains focus. After you are satisfied that the content of your paper is good, carefully proofread it and correct mechanical errors.
Here is a brief breakdown of the project so that you can plan your time in the course:
WeekTask
Week 1Topic Selection
Week 3Issue Review (both sides)
Week 5Thesis & Annotated Bibliography (both sides)
Week 7Argumentative Paper
InstructionsThis week, you will complete your argumentative paper. Following the directions in assigned textbook reading on how write an argumentative essay on the issue you chose in Week 1. Be sure your essay contains the following:
An opening paragraph that states a clear thesis that is focused, plausible, and arguable and that gives direction and purpose to the paper
A fair-minded, balanced, and objective development of the pros and cons of the issue in a well-organized sequence of ideas, free of mechanical errors
Credible, reliable, and authoritative evidence in support of the points made
A strong conclusion that summarizes your views, reminds the audience of the issue and its importance, and shows in brief that you have successfully defended your thesis
NoteAs you do your research, it is permissible to change your sources. Also, because of the recency and relevance of these issues, no sources older than 5 years should be used other than as historical information. Critical thinkers do the research first and then side with the preponderance of evidence. You might want to follow that principle.
Writing Requirements (APA format)Length: 4-6 pages (not including title page or references page)
1-inch margins
Double spaced
12-point Times New Roman font
Title page
References page
GradingThis activity will be graded using the W7 Course Project Grading Rubric.
OutcomesCO 3: Analyze deductive and inductive reasoning structures.
CO 4: Evaluate arguments by applying tests of truthfulness, logical strength, relevance, and non-circularity.
CO 5: Evaluate the role of cognitive bias and fallacies of relevance in critical reasoning and decision-making.
CO 6: Apply principles of critical reasoning to political, educational, economic, and/or social issues.
CO 7: Create a fallacy-free argument that incorporates principles of ethical decision-making.
Due DateBy 11:59 p.m. MT on Sunday
Rubric
W7 Course Project Grading Rubric – 185 pts
W7 Course Project Grading Rubric – 185 pts
CriteriaRatingsPts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeLength
5 ptsMeets length requirement
0 ptsDoes not meet length requirement
5 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomePurpose & Focus
10 ptsThe writer has made insightful and mature decisions about focus, organization, and content to communicate clearly and effectively. The purpose and focus of the writing are clear to the reader and the organization and content are well chosen, sophisticated, and/or persuasive. Has a highly developed, defendable thesis that provides focus and direction to the essay.
8.5 ptsThe writer has made good decisions about focus, organization, and content to communicate clearly and effectively. The purpose and focus of the writing are clear to the reader and the organization and content achieve the purpose as well. Has a clear recognizable thesis that provides focus and direction to the essay.
7.5 ptsThe writer’s decisions about focus, organization, or content sometimes interfere with clear, effective communication. The purpose of the writing is not fully achieved. Thesis is unclear OR is not focused
6 ptsThe writer’s decisions about focus, organization, or content interfere with communication. The purpose of the writing is not achieved. Lacks a clear thesis
0 ptsCompletely unfocused and/or disorganized. Purpose of writing is not achieved. No recognizable thesis
10 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeQuality of Research/Evidence
40 ptsSources are scholarly or of very high substantive quality where subject matter requires and no scholarly reference will serve the purpose, but all are current, authoritative, and relevant to topic.
34 ptsMost sources are scholarly or of very high substantive quality where subject matter requires; but all are current, authoritative and relevant to topic.
30 ptsSources are mostly substantive, even where subject matter does not require. All are relevant to the topic. One source outside of current range.
24 ptsSources are substantive, even though scholarly sources are available and relevaant. Only one scholarly source. All are relevant to the topic. More than one source outside of current range.
0 ptsPopular sources only and are not, therefore, authoritative, OR sources are not current, OR sources are not relevant
40 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeReasoning
45 ptsSubstantial and well-reasoned development of ideas. All key assumptions are made explicit. Credible evidence is germane, and accurately analyzed and fair- mindedly interpreted. Displays strong critical thinking skills and habits of mind.
38.25 ptsOffers solid reasoning. Most key assumptions are recognized or made explicit. Most inferences are accurate, most examples are on point.
33.75 ptsOffers some supporting evidence. The case includes some examples that are too general, not interpreted, or not clearly relevant to thesis.
27 ptsOffers simplistic, underdeveloped, circular, or irrelevant arguments.
0 ptsIncludes fallacies, exaggerations, faulty reasoning, factual errors, biased statements, etc.
45 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeOrganization
30 ptsSequencing of ideas within paragraphs and transitions between paragraphs flow smoothly and coherently throughout the paper. The writer shows clear effort to assist the reader in following the logic of the ideas expressed. Develops a complete reasoning pathway that contains logical follow through, considers multiple points of view,and examines assumptions.
25.5 ptsSequencing of ideas within paragraphs and transitions between paragraphs make the writer’s points coherent and easy to follow. Develops a logical reasoning pathway with minor gaps or leaps while addressing other points of view.
22.5 ptsSentence structure and/ or word choice sometimes interfere with clarity and coherence. Needs to improve sequencing of ideas within paragraphs and transitions between paragraphs to make the writing easy to follow May contain some gaps in reasoning pathway; deals minimally with other points of view.
18 ptsIneffective sentence structure, word choice, transitions, and/ or sequencing of ideas make reading and understanding difficult. Contains gaps and/or leaps in development and does not examine other points of view.
0 ptsDisorganized; little or no sequencing of ideas; awkward and ineffective sentence structure; reading and understanding extremely difficult Undeveloped and/or does not examine other points of view.
30 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeAcademic Tone
20 ptsMaintains objective and professional tone; uses professional vocabulary. The use of words, sentences, and punctuation creates a distinct and engaging voice, tone, and level of formality appropriate to audience, purpose, and genre.
17 ptsUses objective and professional vocabulary. The use of words, sentences, and punctuation creates a consistent voice, tone, and level of formality appropriate to audience, purpose, and genre.
15 ptsSome informality in vocabulary. The use of words, sentences, and punctuation creates an inconsistent voice, tone, or formality level that is occasionally inappropriate to the situation.
12 ptsThe use of words, sentences, and punctuation shows a lack of awareness of the voice, tone, and formality level expected in academic writing.
0 ptsInformal; uses slang or colloquialisms; fails to achieve tone and level of formality expected in academic writing.
20 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeWriting: Punctuation, Spelling, Capitalization
5 ptsVirtually free of punctuation, spelling, or capitalization errors.
4 ptsOccasional punctuation, spelling, or capitalization errors.
3 ptsMany punctuation, spelling, or capitalization errors. Interfere with meaning in some places.
2 ptsPunctuation, spelling, or capitalization errors that hinder communication.
0 ptsSevere punctuation, spelling and capitalization errors.
5 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeWriting: Sentence Structure
10 ptsSentence structure is complex and powerful. The writer has used vivid, purposefully crafted, and varied sentence styles and lengths.
8.5 ptsSentences are effective and varied in style and length.
7.5 ptsSentences show limited variety in sentence style and length.
6 ptsSentence structure is simple, without variety in sentence style and length.
0 ptsSentence structures are awkward and/or unclear, impeding the clarity and flow of ideas.
10 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeWriting: Word Choice
10 ptsThe writer displays a broad range of vocabulary, with effective, accurate, and contextually appropriate word usage.
8.5 ptsThe writer displays a satisfactory range of vocabulary and accurate and appropriate word usage.
7.5 ptsThe writer displays some varied word choice but language is mostly vague and needs more accuracy to properly convey ideas. Some errors of diction and usage are evident but do not interfere significantly with readability.
6 ptsThe writer displays a limited range of vocabulary. Errors of diction and usage are evident and begin to interfere significantly with readability.
0 ptsLimited vocabulary. Diction and syntax errors are evident and impede a clear reading of the text.
10 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeAPA Format
10 ptsIntext and reference citations in correct APA format with no errors.
8.5 ptsIntext and reference citations in correct APA format with only occasional minor error.
7.5 ptsInterfere with meaning in some places. Some major errors in APA format for intext, reference citations.
6 ptsThe writer does not use APA format, presentation, or style (citations) for the assignment or APA formatting has many major errors.
0 ptsNo intext citations to sources and/or no list of references in APA format
10 pts
Total Points: 185
week 1
State the topic chosen from the list or topic approved by instructor.
State the specific issue you will explore.This must be stated either as a question (“Should prostitution be legalized?”) or a whether-or-not statement (“Whether prostitution should be legalized”).
For the stated issue, state three (3) aspects of the issue that you think you will likely develop in your paper. Briefly state why you have chosen each aspect.You are not confined to three aspects only, but you must developat least three. As you develop your paper, you may find other aspects that you deem more relevant, and may add or substitute those.Example: For the topic of prostitution, you might examine the aspect of personal autonomy, public health aspects, and law enforcement aspects, at a minimum.
Example: For the topic of free healthcare for undocumented persons, you might address economic aspects, ethical aspects, and public health aspects, at a minimum.(3 aspcts
week 2
Issue
review both sides
This
week, you will conduct an issue review for your selected topic for your
project. Present a brief report of your research on both sides of the issue.
This should include the following:
· Citation of your sources
· Links to the sources where available
· Brief description of the content of each of the sources (50
to 80 words for each source)
Your
research review should address at least three (3) aspects of
the issue that is the subject of your paper and must present at least
one pro and one con article review on each aspect. Sources should be
scholarly or of very high substantive quality.
Click
on the following link to view an example. The first aspect is written out
completely, with APA citation and brief description of content. The next two
aspects should be completely written out by you in your report, including
correct APA citation and brief description of content. (50 words)
week 3;Thesis & Annotated Bibliography (both sides)Thesis & Annotated Bibliography (both sides)
submit
the following:
· A thesis statement stating your opinion/conclusion on the
issue, the supporting points you will offer and at least one relevant opposing
view you will address.
· An annotated bibliography with evaluation of at least five
(5) sources you intend to use in your final paper to support your claim.
oThese are sources that provide evidence to support that
your claim should be accepted by the reader.
oScholarly sources are preferred and should be used where
available; due to the nature of some of the topics, authoritative articles in
very high quality substantive journals may also be acceptable.
Use
the Source Evaluation Worksheet to determine the following:
· If your source is current
oIf it is not current, explain why you think it is
acceptable.
· If your source is credible, reliable, and authoritative
· How well your source supports your thesis
oIf the annotation does not make this obvious, explain to
your instructor how you will use it.
· If your supportis popular
oIf it is, explain to your instructor why you think it is
acceptable.
Prepare
a citation, annotation, and evaluation for each source (100 words )
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