A Workbook for Reading Argumentative Texts
eBook - ePub

A Workbook for Reading Argumentative Texts

Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

A Workbook for Reading Argumentative Texts

Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding

About this book

This Workbook is a collection of exercises and case studies designed to serve as a companion to Reading Argumentative Texts: Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding. The exercises and case studies track each of the chapters of Reading and provide opportunities for students to hone their skills at using the analytic tools presented in Reading, and to acquire additional analytic tools and concepts. These tools are illustrated through the analysis of complete essays from the mass media, speeches, a sermon, and passages from academic works.

The approach is flexible and practical and avoids academic jargon and specific theories of argumentation. As is the case with Reading, this Workbook is grounded in two principles. First, that the meaning of an argumentative text is to be found in the statements that constitute the argument itself, in other statements that are more or less directly related to the argument, and in the structure and context of the text. Accordingly, while this book discusses the analysis of arguments, argument-types, and errors in argumentation (fallacies), it focuses equally on the other sources of meaning of a text. Second, there is no single, authoritative reading of an argumentative text.

The interplay of these two premises informs the view that analyzing and understanding an argumentative text is an art and that, within certain well-defined parameters, there are "better" and "worse" readings of a text and not "right" or "wrong" readings.

The principal sources of meaning discussed include: (1) the structure of the text (and so the book examines six types of introductions and teaches how to outline and summarize), (2) key sentences, phrases, and words in a text (so the book discusses ambiguity, the difference between factual and normative statements, irony, and rhetoric), (3) context (intellectual, social, political, cultural, and physical context), and (4) the logical connections between terms in an argument (including the four different types of arguments, fallacies, and the distinction between necessary and sufficient conditions).

The book is designed to be used in late high school or early college critical reading, critical thinking, rhetoric, or writing courses.

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Yes, you can access A Workbook for Reading Argumentative Texts by James E. Scheuermann in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Education & Teaching Languages. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Preface
  2. Chapter 1: Introduction
  3. Chapter 2: Reading Is Not a Spectator Sport
  4. Chapter 3: Why Are You Reading?
  5. Chapter 4: Arguments: A Closer Look
  6. Chapter 5: Every Person Has a Skeleton, Every Argument Has a Structure
  7. Chapter 6: What Does the Skeleton Look Like? Outlines and Summaries
  8. Chapter 7: Ambiguity and Nonliteral Uses of Language
  9. Chapter 8: Context Imparts Meaning
  10. Chapter 9: The ABCs of Logic
  11. Appendix A: Answer Key
  12. Appendix B: Refugees Don’t Undermine the US Economy—They Energize It
  13. Appendix C: The Disadvantages of an Elite Education
  14. Appendix D: The Meaning of July 4 is Sacrifice
  15. Appendix E: Antidotes for Fear
  16. Appendix F: It’s Time to End Any Level of Federal Marijuana Prohibition
  17. About the Author