推荐文档列表

Persuasive Essays

时间:2022-02-06 17:18:29 其它英语写作 我要投稿

Persuasive Essays

In persuasive writing,

we try to convince others

to agree with our facts, share our values,

accept our argument and conclusions,

and adopt our way of thinking.

Elements toward building a good persuasive essay include

establishing facts to support an argument

clarifying relevant values for your audience (perspective)

prioritizing, editing, and/or sequencing

the facts and values in importance to build the argument

forming and stating conclusions

"persuading" your audience that your conclusions

are based upon the agreed-upon facts and shared values

having the confidence to communicate your "persuasion" in writing

Here are some strategies to complete a persuasive writing assignment:

Write out the questions in your own words.

Think of the questions posed in the assignment

while you are reading and researching. Determine facts

the source of the facts for reliability and later reference

source of the facts for prejudice

values that color the facts or the issue

what you think of the author's argument

List out facts; consider their importance:

prioritize, edit, sequence, discard, etc.

Ask yourself "What's missing?"

What are the "hot buttons" of the issue?

List possible emotions/emotional reactions and recognize them for later use

Start writing a draft!

Start as close as possible to your reading/research

Do not concern yourself with grammar or spelling

Write your first paragraph Introduce the topic

Inform the reader of your point of view!

Entice the reader to continue with the rest of the paper!

Focus on three main points to develop

Establish flow from paragraph to paragraph

Keep your voice active

Quote sources to establish authority

Stay focused on your point of view throughout the essay

Focus on logical arguments

Don't lapse into summary

in the development--wait for the conclusion

Conclusion Summarize, then conclude, your argument

Refer to the first paragraph/opening statement as well as the main points

does the conclusion restate the main ideas?

reflect the succession and importance of the arguments

logically conclude their development?

Edit/rewrite the first paragraph

to better telegraph your development and conclusion.

Take a day or two off!

Re-read your paper

with a fresh mind and a sharp pencil Ask yourself:

Does this make sense? Am I convinced?

Will this convince a reader?

Will they understand my values, and agree with my facts?

Edit, correct, and re-write as necessary

Check spelling and grammar!

Have a friend read it and respond to your argument.

Were they convinced?

Revise if necessary

Turn in the paper

Celebrate a job well done,

with the confidence that you have done your best.

How to respond to criticism:

Consider criticism as a test of developing your powers of persuasion.

Try not to take it personally.

If your facts are criticized, double check them, and then cite your sources.

If your values are criticized, sometimes we need agree "to disagree".

Remember: your success in persuading others assumes that the other person is open to being persuaded!

Fear: If you are not used to communicating, especially in writing, you may need to overcome fear on several levels. Writing, unlike unrecorded speech, is a permanent record for all to see, and the "context" is not as important as in speech where context "colors" the words. For example: your readers do not see you, only your words. They do not know what you look like, where you live, who you are.

Hopefully in school, and class, we have a safe place to practice both the art of writing and of persuasion. Then later, when we are in our communities, whether work, church, neighborhoods, and even families, we can benefit from this practice.

Persuasion also has another dimension: it is built with facts, which illustrate conclusions. Of course, this means you need to know what you are talking about, and cannot be lazy with your facts, or you will not succeed in convincing anyone. This shows another level of fear: Fear of making a mistake that will make your argument or persuasion meaningless. Since you are writing, and the words are on paper for all to see (or on a web site!), you need to work to make sure your facts are in order.