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CLAIM -  DATA - WARRANT The elements of an argumentative essay. CLAIM -  DATA - WARRANT The elements of an argumentative essay.

CLAIM - DATA - WARRANT The elements of an argumentative essay. - PowerPoint Presentation

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CLAIM - DATA - WARRANT The elements of an argumentative essay. - PPT Presentation

Elements of an Argument According to Stephen Toulmin arguments are composed of three main elements Ω Claims Ω DataEvidence Ω Warrants Stephen E Toulmin He was born in England in 1922 ID: 638394

warrant claim data evidence claim warrant evidence data good support claims rule students logical people opinion facts study point

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Slide1

CLAIM - DATA - WARRANT

The elements of an argumentative essay.Slide2

Elements of an Argument

According to Stephen Toulmin, arguments are composed of three main elements:

Ω Claims

Ω Data/Evidence

Ω WarrantsSlide3

Stephen E. Toulmin

He was born in England in 1922.

He was a philosopher and rhetorical theorist.

He taught at USC from 1993-2009.

In 1958, he offered his model of argumentation: a way to compare “truths.”Slide4

What is an Argument?

First of all, what it is not. It is not a fight. Although you may, and probably should , feel passionate about your topic, arguments are supposed to be intellectual activities not shouting matches.

Ω However, an argument does involve two opposing points of view. This means that you must include the opposing side, even if only briefly.Slide5

What is claim, data, warrant?

Claim, data, warrant (CDW) is a formal and logical writing style.

Ω CDW helps you PROVE your thoughts in a logical way using evidence.

Ω It also can be used for answering open response questions, discussion questions, or writing paragraphs & essays.

Ω You can use it in any class.Slide6

What is claim, data, warrant?

It is what you already know how to do with writing:

Claim – a thesis about a topic

Ω Data – the support (evidence) about a topic

Ω Warrant – a general, unspoken rule that most people would agree uponSlide7

Toulmin’s Model

When a prompt asks you to support, refute, or qualify a statement, use this method.Slide8

Claim

This is the main point of the argument. What you are trying to prove.

Example:

The school lunch program contributes to childhood obesity.Slide9

Data/Evidence

Includes facts, statistics, authorities, SOLID opinion, and examples all usually from source material depending on the claim.

Example:

On October 5, Mesa Public Schools served two options for lunch: pizza and burritos. The pizza contained 21 grams of fat, and the burrito contained 15 grams of fat. A healthy meal should contain no more than 7 grams of fat (Donovan 3).Slide10

Warrant/Rule

An assumption/rule which shows the connection between the claim and the evidence.

Example:

Feeding students lunches with wit high fat contents will cause students to acquire extra pounds.

NOTE: The warrant must be widely accepted or believed to be true by the majority of the public.Slide11

Connecting the Claim and the Data

Sometimes it helps to create a diagram of the claim, data, and warrant that looks like the example below.

Claim----------------------------------------------Data

Lunch program is bad Pizza/burritos have high fat content

Warrant: Fatty lunches cause obesity.Slide12

Claims

Definition: A claim states your position on the issue/topic you have chosen to write about. It answers the questions:

Ω What point will your essay or paragraph try to make?

AND

Ω What belief or opinion will you be defending?Slide13

Claims

Ω What you are claiming is true.

Ω Your clear and provable opinion about the subject.

Ω Called the Main Claim in the introduction.

Ω Called a Sub-Claim when the topic sentence of a body paragraphSlide14

Good Claims

Ω A good claim is logical; it emerges from the reasonable consideration of evidence.

Ω A good claim is

debatable

. Claims that are purely factual, and claims that are only opinion fail this requirement. You cannot argue mattes of personal taste.

Fact: There are many homeless people in the US.

Taste: Comedies are better than dramas.Slide15

Good Claims

Ω A good claim is not obvious. Why bother proving a point with which nobody could disagree?

Ω A good claim is

engaging

. Consider your audience’s attention span and make an interesting claim which points out new ideas: teach the reader something new.

Ω A good claim is not overly vague.

It is specific.

Attacking enormous issues leads only to generalizations and vague assertions.Slide16

Data/Evidence

Definition:

The evidence which you cite to support your claim. Like a lawyer presenting evidence to a jury, you must support your claim with facts; and unsupported claim is merely an opinion.Slide17

Types of Evidence

Facts or Statistics: a point of evidence that claims some objective

Expert Testimony: a stated opinion be a person experienced in the field

Case Study: a study based on facts and statistics that explains a pointSlide18

Data/Evidence

Examples to support your claim

Cited quotes from the text to support your claim

Cited references to the text to support your claim

Ω Cited statistics to support your claim

Ω Content specific vocabulary that supports your claimSlide19

Evidence Exercise

Given the following claim, choose the evidence that would most effectively support the claim.

Claim: Social networking websites are detrimental to society. Slide20

Claim: Social networking websites are detrimental to society.

1. According to the 2007 National School Boards Report, teens spend an average of 9 hours per week on social networking sites.

2. A 2009 study found that 17.3% of middle school students have been victims of cyberbullying.

3. My mom hates Facebook because I am on it all the time.

4. A 2009 study found that 2/3 of workers with Facebook accounts access the site during work hours.

5. A friend of mine posted pictures of a teen party showing teenagers participating in illicit activities and clearly breaking the law.

6. One out of every five students admits to posting bad things on a social media network.

7. I have been cyberbullied several times including people posting pictures of me.Slide21

Warrant/Rule

Definition:

The warrant interprets the evidence and shows how it connects to the claim. It is a general assumption that most people agree upon or believe to be true.

In other words, the warrant/rule explains why the evidence proves the claim. It is the most important part. If it is not strong and logical, it will ruin your argument. It is probably the most difficult part to write.Slide22

Warrant

The explanation of how the evidence support the claim.

Explains how the example, statistic, quote, or reference supports the claim.

Explains the significance of the evidence.Slide23

Good Warrants

A good warrant will be a reasonable explanation of facts..

A good warrant will not make unreasonable explanation or leaps. It is logical.

A good warrant may consider and respond to possible counter-arguments.Slide24

Connecting the Claim and the Data

Sometimes it helps to create a diagram of the claim, data, and warrant that looks like the example below.

Claim----------------------------------------------Data

Smoking is bad It can cause diseases.

Warrant: Smoking can cause lung cancer.Slide25

Warrant Practice

Claim: People should not eat that mushroom.

Data/Evidence: The mushroom is poisonous.

Warrant/Rule: Eating poisonous foods is dangerous.Slide26

Warrant Practice

Claim: The seniors should not elect Mike to be class president.

Data/Evidence: Mike is way too laid back.

Warrant/Rule: Laid back people do not make good class presidents.Slide27

Review

A claim is made.

Evidence is produced in the form of logical facts.

The

Warrant

connects the

Evidence/Data

to the

Claim

.Slide28

Read the paragraph and find the CDW

Students are not going to do well on the test Very few students studied. Most of the time, when students don’t study, their grades suffer.Slide29

Read the paragraph and find the CDW

Since it is raining today, Jane should take her umbrella. The umbrella will keep her dry.Slide30

CDW Paragraphs

1. Claim

2. Introduce first piece of evidence (cite if needed)

3. Warrant

4. Transition and second pieces of evidence (cite if needed)

5. Warrant

6. More evidence or conclusion