Brevet Students @ ACS
- What’s your point/argument?
- What evidence do you have?
- Why do you think your evidence supports your claim?
You need to ask these questions on your reader's behalf & answer them appropriately. A Good Argument should offer:
- a claim (it states what you want readers to believe)
- evidence or grounds that support it (the reason readers should believe your claim)
- a warrant (a general principle that explains why evidence is relevant to your claim)
- qualifications that make your claim and evidence more precise.
The more your argument asks readers to change their minds, the more significant it will seem to them. Making strong claims
A claim is significant to the extent that it changes how people believe
- a claim must be substantive (firmly constructed- important)
- a claim must be contestable (it should lead the reader to think)
- a claim must be specific/explicit
Offering reliable evidence
1. do make a claim
- accurate
- precise
- sufficient
- representative
- authoritative (cite the most authoritative/current sources)
- perspicuous (clear as evidence, and readers need to see that)
- (relevant and appropriate)
2. do provide evidence or grounds to support that claim
Does the Rough Draft include
-Title page (header, page number, running head,...)Contents Page
Check the following page for more info:
http://members.fortunecity.com/nadabs/research-intell.doc
-Table of contents
-Definition of terms/concepts/keywords
-Statement of Purpose (The aim/purpose of this study is to...)
-Final outline
-Title (again) + Research Question (that you have to refer back to throughout your essay)
-Introduction
-Body: Facts & Analysis including titles & subtitles
-Conclusion
-References APA format
-Appendix (including the preliminary outline and all the documents you have already given me: second outline if any, first draft, interviews, surveys, hard copies, etc...)+ Illustrations
For in-text citation format go to these pages:
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_apa.html
http://www.wisc.edu/writetest/Handbook/DocAPACitations.htmlBe CREATIVE & make it interesting, logical, and coherent!
Don't forget to hand in a copy on a floppy disc as well!
A contents page must be placed after the title page and all pages should be numbered.Definition of Terms/Concepts
In order for the reader to understand very well what you are talking about, you have to define all the difficult terms and the keywords/concepts.Statement of Purpose
Why did you choose this topic? What do you expect to learn? How do you think it will benefit your classmates/reader/audience? (You NEED to sound extremely enthusiastic!)Introduction
Does the introduction include:Body/Development
- An indication of why the topic chosen is interesting, important or worthy of study.
- Some background information and an attempt to place the topic in appropriate context.
- An indication of whether the topic has been narrowed to a focus of more manageable proportions.
- A clearly and precisely stated research question.
- A clear concluding statement of the thesis and argument, i.e. the response to the research question that will subsequently be developed in the body of the essay.
The essential feature of the body is a convincing answer to the research question. The structure and approach will depend on the subject in which the essay is being undertaken. Some subjects may require sub-headings for major sections within the main body. Scientific investigations will usually have separate sections for method and results. In other subjects, sub-headings should be avoided because they disrupt the flow and unity of an essay.Conclusion
The requirements of a conclusion are that itDoes the conclusion follow these requirements?
- Is clearly stated
- Is relevant to the research question being investigated
- Is substantiated by the evidence presented
- Indicates issues, unresolved questions and new questions that have emerged from the research.
References
The direct or indirect use of the words of another person, written , oral or electronic, must be acknowledged appropriately as must visual material in the essay, derived from another source. Failure to do this will be viewed as plagiarism.
The bibliography or list of references should only include those works, such as books and journals, that have been consulted by you. It is good practice to study a major style of referencing appropriate to the subject of the essay so that you can present your references professionally.
Each work consulted, regardless or whether or not it has already been cited as a reference, must be listed in the bibliography.Illustrations
Presentation and overall neatness are important, and it is essential that illustrative material, if included, is well set out and used effectively. Graphs, diagrams, tables and maps are effective only if they are well labelled and can be easily read. This must be directly related to the text and acknowledged where appropriate. The use of photographs and postcards is acceptable only if they are captioned and/or annotated and are used to illustrate a specific point made in the essay.
Assessment:
General Assessment Criteria
These criteria are mainly concerned with the writing of the introduction and conclusion, the use of information and data, and the overall presentation.A Research Question & Thesis
The research question (or specific issue to be investigated) is clearly and precisely stated and is sharply focused and is therefore susceptible to effective treatment within the word limit. The thesis refers back to the research question.B Data Information
The data gathered/generated and/or background information selected is directly relevant to the research.C Analysis/Evaluation
The data/information derived has been systematically and competently analysed using appropriate and correctly applied techniques.Where an evaluation is appropriate a range of interpretations have been considered and their merit appraised.D Discussion/Argument
The discussion/argument is consistently relevant to the research question (or specific issue being investigated) and is well organised and therefore easy to follow.E Conclusion
The conclusion is clearly stated, is relevant to the research question and fully substantiated by the evidence presented. If appropriate, the conclusion clearly indicates unresolved questions and new questions that have emerged from the research.F Overall Presentation
Running head- header- double space- font 12- page numbers- titles for major parts- purpose- definition of terms/concepts ...G Language and mechanics
Sentence structure, grammar, spelling, coherence, cohesion, punctuation ...
Presentation/Essay Checklist
Judge the essay against these criteria:
- Is the essay a reasoned argument in which the writer endeavours to persuade a skeptical reader of the justifiability of the line of argument adopted?
- Is there an argument? Is each part of it clear? Is it easy to understand and does it make sense? (The argument should be clear from the beginning and not tacked on the end)
- Does the essay develop logically through a series of arguments or points?
- What evidence is used to support arguments (too little, too much, inappropriate)?
- Does the essay show evidence of the imaginative use of a variety of sources (precising one or more source is not adequate)?
- Is the essay clear and readable? (Pay attention to grammar and spelling)
- Does the essay contain repetitive or irrelevant material?
- Has a bibliography of all materials consulted been included? Does it follow the APA style?
- Are all quotations properly cited?
- Is the essay within limits?
- Presentation: Has the essay been word processed, allowing double space between lines and a 12-point font?
This page was adapted by Nada AbiSamra from:Wayne C. Booth, Gregory G. Colomb, and Joseph M. Williams: The Craft of Research
(Handout given to me by Mr. William T. Livingston, English coordinator @ ACS).Extended Essay Guidelines
http://www.rism.ac.th/class/hs/ib/eeguidelines.pdfThe university of Liverpool- Guidelines for extended essay
http://www.liv.ac.uk/~lynnf/extessay.htmlOfficial home page of the International Baccalaureate Organization
http://www.ibo.org/Oral/Written Presentations Guidelines and Expectations
http://nadabs.tripod.com/presguide1.html
Name ______________________________________________________________________
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Research Question ____________________________________________________________
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Letter Grade given ____________________________
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What needs to be improved/added _______________________________________________
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Name of evaluator _____________________________
Evaluator's Signature
Date ___________________________________
Teacher Grade: _________________________