introduction to debate and building an effective argument
TRANSCRIPT
Argument (argumentation)
• To take a side from a proposition-give the audience FACTS.
• Intends to provide insight offers a verifiable perspective for the audience
• Supports reasoning with valid evidence.• Considers opposing viewpoints.• Provides rationale to clarify/explain
relevance and validity of evidence.
Persuade:
• To try to convince someone-try to change their OPINION.
• Based on the writer’s opinion
• Attempts to influence the perspective of the audience by appealing to their emotions, sense of right and wrong or to sense of identity.
• Selects facts and emotion to support opinion.
Are we persuading?
• WE ARE NOT WRITING TO PERSUADE!!!
• We will be speaking and riting to build effective arguments.
What Is Debate?
- Debate is a formal academic competition in which students argue both sides of a given topic.
- The foundation of debate is speaking. Students deliver speeches based on logic and research, attempting to persuade a judge to endorse their argument.
Evidence:
• Facts and examples to prove something.
• For on demand writing, quotes from the passage/article.
• Give credit to author when you’re writing with direct quotes OR…paraphrasing.
Claim/Contention/Thesis:
• Claim: One side of an argument derived from a proposition.
• Contention: A strong statement to support one side of an argument.
Affirmative vs. Negative- The job of the Affirmative (Aff) is to prove that the
topic (resolution) is a good idea.
- The job of the Negative (Neg) is to prove that the topic (resolution) is a bad idea.
- A judge will evaluate the debate and vote for whichever team does a better job proving their point.
- Being an eloquent speaker helps, but debate has much more to do with winning substantive arguments than with oratory.
- Debaters use a combination of research, logic, and strategy in order to persuade judges that they have won.
Affirmative vs. Negative
- The core of debate is refutation. Debaters both make their own arguments and are respsonsible for responding to arguments made by the other team. That is what distinguishes debate from other speaking contests.
- In order to adequately respond to the arguments made by the opposing team, debaters need to prove that their own arguments are better reasoned, better evidenced, have historical or empirical support, or have greater significance.
Counterclaim /Counterargument
• An opposing argument or response to your claim/argument of the proposition.