PREFACE FOR INSTRUCTORS |
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iii | |
Part One The Structure of Argument |
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1 | (370) |
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1. Understanding Argument |
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3 | (22) |
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3 | (3) |
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6 | (2) |
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8 | (1) |
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9 | (3) |
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12 | (10) |
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SAMPLE ANALYIS: The Declaration of Independence |
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16 | (10) |
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When revolutionaries resolved to throw off their king and form their own government, they turned to the eloquent Jefferson for a defense of their audacious plan. |
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Writer's Guide: Learning the Key Terms |
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22 | (1) |
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Assignments for Understanding Argument |
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22 | (3) |
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2. Responding to Argument |
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25 | (37) |
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Responding as a Critical Reader |
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26 | (4) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: The Pursuit of Whining: Affirmative Action circa 1776 |
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27 | (4) |
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A history teacher charges that affirmative action advocates have inherited a troubling emphasis on hereditary right and privilege from America's founding fathers. |
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30 | (1) |
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31 | (8) |
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SAMPLE ANALYSIS: The Gettysburg Address |
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33 | (1) |
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The sixteenth American president gave this famous speech to dedicate the cemetery at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, where thousands died in a decisive battle in the Civil War. |
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SAMPLE ANALYSIS: Lincoln's Logic |
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34 | (5) |
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The author of When in the Course of Human Events: Arguing the Case for Southern Secession analyzes logical fallacies in Lincoln's famous Gettysburg Address. |
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39 | (5) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: No-Win Situations |
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39 | (8) |
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The author of No Contest: The Case against Competition discusses the psychologically damaging effects of competitive sports and asserts that "recreation at its best does not require people to triumph over others." |
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Responding as a Critical Listener |
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44 | (3) |
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Responding to a Visual Argument |
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47 | (9) |
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SAMPLE ANALYSIS OF AN ADVERTISMENT: We Can Not Tell a Lie |
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50 | (2) |
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SAMPLE ANALYSIS OF A WEB SITE: The Hungersite.com [Web site] |
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52 | (4) |
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56 | (2) |
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58 | (2) |
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Writer's Guide: Documenting Use of Summary, Paraphrase, and Quotation |
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58 | (2) |
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Assignments for Responding to Argument |
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60 | (2) |
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62 | (42) |
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The Purposes of Definition |
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62 | (2) |
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Defining the Terms in Your Argument |
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64 | (2) |
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Methods for Defining Terms |
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66 | (5) |
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71 | (31) |
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Writer's Guide: Writing a Definition Essay |
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71 | (1) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: Cloning Misperceptions |
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72 | (8) |
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An expert in behavioral genetics argues that there is little reason to fear human cloning because human personality is shaped by environment and cannot be genetically cloned. Thus, a clone would simply be a later-born twin. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: The Nature of Prejudice |
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80 | (2) |
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Identifying other people's prejudice is easy, observes a Harvard psychologist, but sometimes it takes a careful definition to help us spot our own. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Race by the Numbers |
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82 | (4) |
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Using recent Census Bureau data, a prominent scholar of race relations in the United States disputes the widespread idea that the white population in America is fast on its way to becoming a minority. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Family a Symbol of Love and Life, but Not Politics |
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86 | (2) |
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A columnist for the Chicago Tribune argues that "family" is too precious a concept to be the battleground on which political battles are fought. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Don't Torture English to Soft-Pedal Abuse |
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88 | (1) |
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A linguist examines the use of the term "torture" in the context of the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. |
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The Great Satan has released a memo... [cartoon] |
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89 | (2) |
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The more you smoke the more cool gear you'll earn. [advertisement] |
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91 | (1) |
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DEBATE: IS THE DEFINITION OF MARRIEAGE CHANGING: Gay Marriage Shows Why We Need to Separate Church and State |
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92 | (5) |
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The minister emeritus of Judson Memorial Church in New York City explains why he believes the gay-marriage debate is primarily about the relationship between church and state. |
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DEBATE: Will It Be Marriage or Civil Union? |
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97 | (7) |
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An attorney and member of the faculty at Wellesley College declares it "time for the gay community to turn its attention to winning all the rights, privileges, protections, and obligations of marriage." |
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102 | (1) |
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Assignments for Understanding Definition |
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102 | (2) |
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104 | (53) |
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104 | (9) |
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Writer's Guide: Defending a Claim of Fact |
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109 | (1) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: CLAIM OF FACT: A Reassuring Scorecard for Affirmative Action |
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109 | (4) |
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This New York Times editorial explains why affirmative action has benefited not only women and minorities, but the economy as well. |
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113 | (9) |
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Writer's Guide: Defending a Claim of Value |
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115 | (1) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: CLAIM OF VALUE: Kids in the Mall: Growing Up Controlled |
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116 | (6) |
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WILLIAM SEVERINI KOWINSKI |
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A journalist evaluates the lessons teens learn in "universities of suburban materialism." |
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122 | (32) |
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Writer's Guide: Defending a Claim of Policy |
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123 | (1) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: CLAIM POLICY: Dependency or Death? Oregonians Make a Chilling Choice |
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124 | (4) |
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The author of Culture of Death: The Assault on Medical Ethics in America looks at the consequences of Oregon's legalization of assisted suicide. He writes that it "is bad medicine and even worse public policy." |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Happiness Is a Warm Planet |
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128 | (2) |
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A senior fellow at the Hoover Institution contends that global warming would be beneficial to most Americans and most of humanity. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: A White Woman of Color |
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130 | (7) |
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Warning Latinos not to adopt America's limiting racial paradigms, a noted author recounts her early years as a recent Dominican immigrant in the United States when some of her fellow countrymen refused to recognize her as a "real" Dominican because of her light skin. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: College Life versus My Moral Code |
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137 | (2) |
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A student at Yale argues that the school's dorm-residency requirements threaten his religious way of life. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Real Marriage, Real Life |
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139 | (3) |
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A writer for American Prospect uses the recent string of reality shows about marriage to argue that those couples who are the best matches financially are the ones most likely to make a marriage work. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Supersize Your Child? |
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142 | (5) |
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The executive director of the Center for Genetics and Society warns of the dangers of letting genetic engineering evolve with little or no regulation. |
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Chance of reading on vacation...[advertisement] |
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147 | (1) |
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DEBATE: WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE COLLEGE COST CRISIS?: Historical Perspective on College Cost Increases |
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148 | (4) |
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JOHN A. BOEHNER AND HOWARD R "BUCK" McKEON |
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Two Republican Congressmen conclude that college tuition costs have reached crisis proportions because institutions of higher learning are not accountable enough to parents, students, and taxpayers—the consumers of higher education. |
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DEBATE: WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE COLLEGE COST CRISIS?: Colleges Caught in Vise |
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152 | (27) |
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In this essay from the New York Times, Stanley Fish, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago, responds to Boehner and McKeon's report, The College Cost Crisis. |
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154 | (1) |
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Assignments for Understanding Claims |
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155 | (2) |
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157 | (63) |
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Types of Support: Evidence and Appeals to Needs and Values |
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157 | (3) |
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160 | (6) |
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166 | (7) |
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Appeals to Needs and Values |
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173 | (6) |
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Evaluation of Appeals to Needs and Values |
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179 | (38) |
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Writer's Guide: Using Effective Support |
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179 | (2) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: Single-Sex Education Benefits Men Too |
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181 | (4) |
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The former president of the Citadel in South Carolina asserts that male students, like their female counterparts, deserve to reap the benefits of single-sex education. |
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SAMPLE ANALYSIS: The True Costs of SUVs |
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185 | (4) |
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A business professor from Berkeley compares car shopping to the arms race: "If other families buy bigger vehicles, then you will want to as well, if only in self-defense." |
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SAMPLE ANALYSIS: The True Confusion about SUV Costs |
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189 | (1) |
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A business instructor provides a critique of Varian's use of evidence. |
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STUDENT ESSAY: Safer? Tastier? More Nutritious? The Dubious Merits of Organic Foods |
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190 | (4) |
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A student writer examines the claim that organic foods are more nutritious than conventionally grown ones. |
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READINGS FOR ANALYSIS: Connecting the Dots...to Terrorism |
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194 | (8) |
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A long-time television news reporter argues that television brings our nation together in moments of crisis, but that it should keep us better informed about where and why crises are developing. |
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READINGS FOR ANALYSIS: A New Look, an Old Battle |
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202 | (3) |
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A Pulitzer Prize—winning journalist and best-selling novelist writes that those who oppose abortion may support beneficial but controversial stem-cell research, which uses cells taken from human embryos. |
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READINGS FOR ANALYSIS: Marriage-Plus |
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205 | (8) |
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A senior policy analyst for the Center for Law and Social Policy argues that while it is advantageous for children to grow up in two-parent families, "much of what it takes to make marriage work for the benefit of spouses and children is not just moral but economic." |
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One Reason [advertisement] |
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213 | (1) |
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DEBATE: Animal Research Saves Human Lives |
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214 | (2) |
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The widow of Albert Sabin, who developed a polio vaccine, claims that without animal research "polio would still be claiming thousands of lives." |
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DEBATE: Why We Don't Need Animal Experimentation |
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216 | (4) |
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Animal research, says the research director of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, is costly, unreliable, and unnecessary. |
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217 | (1) |
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Assignments for Understanding Support |
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218 | (2) |
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220 | (49) |
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220 | (12) |
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SAMPLE ESSAY: Musical Reasoning |
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227 | (5) |
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A student looks at the connection between musical training and spatial-temporal thought. |
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232 | (33) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: The Case for Torture |
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234 | (3) |
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A philosophy professor reasons that if torture is the only way to squeeze life-saving information from a kidnapper or terrorist, we should overcome our repugnance and apply the electrodes. |
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Writer's Guide: Recognizing Warrants |
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237 | (1) |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: A Proposal to Abolish Grading |
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238 | (3) |
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The author of Growing Up Absurd argues that if the goal of higher education is education, we should use tests that foster learning, not competition. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: An Unjust Sacrifice |
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241 | (3) |
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A Roman Catholic priest argues that the separation of conjoined twins—an operation that will result in the death of one of the babies—is wrong, and shows a dangerous way of measuring the value of a life. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Computers and the Pursuit of Happiness |
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244 | (9) |
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A professor of computer science at Yale asks a simple question: Are computers good for mankind? His answer may surprise you. |
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Newman's Own 100% Grape Juice [advertisement] |
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253 | (1) |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Do We Need the Census Race Question? |
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254 | (9) |
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An education and sociology professor makes a radical proposal about the census: Downplay the race issue. |
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DEBATE: ARE YOUR RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR OWN WEIGHT: Absolutely. Government Has No Business Interfering with What You Eat |
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263 | (1) |
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A columnist and policy analyst argues that yes, you are responsible. |
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DEBATE: ARE YOUR RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR OWN WEIGHT: Not If Blaming the Victim Is Just an Excuse to Let Industry Off the Hook |
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264 | (6) |
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KELLY BROWNELL AND MARION NESTLE |
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A psychologist and a nutritionist argue that the fast-food industry must bear some of the blame for our epidemic of obesity. |
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265 | (1) |
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Assignments for Understanding Warrants |
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266 | (3) |
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7. Induction, Deduction, and Logical Fallacies |
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269 | (45) |
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270 | (4) |
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SAMPLE ESSAY: AN INDUCTIVE ARGUMENT: True or False: Schools Fail Immigrants |
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271 | (3) |
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The national education columnist for the New York Times looks at the complex issues behind the question of whether public schooling has failed immigrants. |
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274 | (9) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: A DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENT: Divorce and Our National Values |
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279 | (6) |
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A clinical professor of psychiatry at Brown University affirms that our epidemic of divorce reflects the increased emphasis on the characteristic American virtue of autonomy, which has been a goal of our psychotherapy for the past fifty years. |
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A Note on the Syllogism and the Toulmin Model |
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283 | (2) |
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285 | (25) |
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Writer's Guide: Avoiding Logical Fallacies |
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295 | (1) |
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READING ON ANALYSIS: On the Nation and Race |
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296 | (5) |
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This excerpt from Mein Kampf expounds the principles of Nazi racist ideology. |
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Cheryl Silas had a highway collision...[advertisement] |
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301 | (1) |
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READING ON ANALYSIS: Show Biz Encourages Looser Teen Sex Habits |
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302 | (2) |
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An adult evaluates the current sex habits of teenagers and laments how things have changed since she herself was a teen. |
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READING ON ANALYSIS: Food for Thought (and for Credit) |
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304 | (2) |
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The director of the Dole Nutrition Institute advocates returning to a modernized version of the old home economics course to teach young people to be more responsible consumers and better guardians of their health and that of their own children. |
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DEBATE: SHOULD THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FUND EMBRYONIC STEM-CELL RESEARCH?: Use the Body's "Repair Kit": We Must Pursue Research on Embryonic Stem Cells |
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306 | (2) |
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An actor, director, and quadriplegic advocates support of the stem-cell research that might make those like him walk again. |
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DEBATE: SHOULD THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FUND EMBRYONIC STEM-CELL RESEARCH?: The Misleading Debate on Stem-Cell Research |
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308 | (11) |
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A syndicated columnist and mother of a child with juvenile diabetes weighs the hope of help for her child against the morality of stem-cell research. |
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310 | (1) |
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Assignments for Understanding Induction, Deduction, and Logical Fallacies |
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310 | (4) |
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314 | (57) |
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314 | (2) |
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316 | (3) |
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319 | (11) |
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Service with a Smile, and Plenty of Metal |
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321 | (2) |
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A writer on Jewish culture and family life wonders why some members of her children's generation have chosen piercings as their way of making a statement. |
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Debra Darvick Advocates Mutilating Babies: PS. She's Also a Bigot |
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323 | (4) |
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The editor and publisher of an online publication on body modification responds to Darvick. |
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327 | (8) |
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A fan of Larratt's publication responds in an online forum to his attack on Darvick. |
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330 | (1) |
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Concrete and Abstract Language |
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331 | (4) |
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335 | (33) |
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SAMPLE ANNOTATED ESSAY: The Childswap Society |
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343 | (3) |
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The president of the American Federation of Teachers maintains that if the United States were to adopt a childswap system, in which children were periodically and randomly redistributed to new parents, we and our lawmakers would quickly work to ensure that all children were provided with equal medical and educational opportunities. |
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Writer's Guide: Choosing Your Worlds Carefully |
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346 | (1) |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Americans Entitled to Cheap Gas—Right? |
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346 | (3) |
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A journalist takes a sarcastic look at Americans' assumption that they deserve the best of everything—no matter what it costs. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: $hotgun Weddings |
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349 | (2) |
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A journalist claims that marriage is all a matter of economics. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: The Speech the Graduates Didn't Hear |
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351 | (2) |
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A scholar's caustic commentary on student-faculty relations indicts college as a ludicrously inappropriate preparation for the unforgiving world outside. |
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READING FOR ANALYSIS: Tightening the Nuts and Bolts of Death by Electric Chair |
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353 | (5) |
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A.C. SOUD JR., WITH TOM KUNTZ |
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Excerpts from a Florida judge's ruling provide chilling details of a botched execution by electric chair—but uphold the state's right to execute its citizens this way. |
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Cease Fire. [advertisement] |
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358 | (1) |
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DEBATE: DOES THE GOVERNMENT HAVE THE RIGHT TO REGULATE GUNS?: The Right to Bear Arms |
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359 | (3) |
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A former chief justice of the United States examines the historical roots of the Second Amendment in order to construct an appeal for gun control. |
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DEBATE: DOES THE GOVERNMENT HAVE THE RIGHT TO REGULATE GUNS?: A God-Given Natural Right |
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362 | (11) |
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A history professor and captain in the Naval Detachment of the California State Military Reserve argues that the Bill of Rights does not have to grant the right to bear arms but rather that it assumes that right already exists. |
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368 | (1) |
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Assignments for Understanding Language and Thought |
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369 | (2) |
Part Two Writing, Researching, and Presenting Arguments |
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371 | (110) |
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9. Writing and Argumentative Paper |
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373 | (21) |
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Finding an Appropriate Topic |
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373 | (3) |
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374 | (1) |
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Evaluating Possible Topics |
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374 | (1) |
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375 | (1) |
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376 | (3) |
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Preparing an Initial Outline |
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376 | (1) |
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Computers in the Outlining Process |
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376 | (1) |
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Case Study: School Uniforms |
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377 | (2) |
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379 | (7) |
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380 | (1) |
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Refuting the Opposing View |
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380 | (1) |
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Finding the Middle Ground |
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381 | (2) |
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Presenting the Stock Issues |
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383 | (1) |
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Ordering Material for Emphasis |
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383 | (1) |
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Considering Scope and Audience |
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384 | (1) |
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385 | (1) |
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386 | (5) |
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386 | (2) |
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Guidelines for Good Writing |
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388 | (3) |
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391 | (1) |
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392 | (2) |
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Writer's Guide: Checklist for Argumentative Papers |
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393 | (1) |
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10. Researching an Argumentative Paper |
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394 | (72) |
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394 | (2) |
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Writer's Guide: Why Use Sources? |
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395 | (1) |
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Mapping Research: A Sample Outline |
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396 | (1) |
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Using Sources: Primary Research |
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396 | (2) |
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Using Sources: Secondary Research |
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398 | (7) |
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Selecting and Searching Databases |
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398 | (2) |
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400 | (2) |
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402 | (1) |
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402 | (1) |
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403 | (1) |
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404 | (1) |
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405 | (11) |
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406 | (1) |
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407 | (1) |
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Evaluating a Web Page: One Example |
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408 | (8) |
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416 | (14) |
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416 | (3) |
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419 | (4) |
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Writer's Guide: Incorporating Quotations into Your Text |
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420 | (3) |
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423 | (1) |
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424 | (2) |
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426 | (2) |
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Including Visuals in Your Paper |
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428 | (1) |
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Keeping Research under Control |
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428 | (1) |
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429 | (2) |
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Writer's Guide: Checklist for Research Papers |
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429 | (1) |
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Compiling an Annotated Bibliography |
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430 | (1) |
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MLA System for Citing Publications |
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431 | (22) |
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SAMPLE RESEARCH PAPER (MLA STYLE): When a Fairy Tale Is Not Just a Fairy Tale |
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439 | (14) |
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APA System for Citing Publications |
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453 | (13) |
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SAMPLE RESEARCH PAPER (APA STYLE): Why Zoos Should Be Eliminated |
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459 | (17) |
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11. Presenting an Argument Orally |
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466 | (15) |
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468 | (1) |
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469 | (1) |
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470 | (3) |
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473 | (2) |
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475 | (1) |
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476 | (7) |
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476 | (1) |
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477 | (1) |
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477 | (1) |
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478 | (13) |
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SAMPLE PERSUASIVE SPEECH: Live Longer and Healthier: Stop Eating Meat! |
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479 | (1) |
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Appendix: Classic Arguments |
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481 | (56) |
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483 | (8) |
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An eighteenth-century satirist concocts a chilling, ironic solution to the problems of Irish poverty and overpopulation. |
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491 | (18) |
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The author of Walden explains why it is reasonable, and often imperative, to disobey laws that one believes to be unjust. |
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509 | (12) |
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The founder of the League of Women Voters uses a 1916 speech to explore how World War I offered the potential to speed up the move toward women's suffrage. |
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Letter from Birmingham Jail |
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521 | (16) |
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In 1963, the imprisoned civil rights leader argues that victims of unjust laws have the right to break those laws so long as they use nonviolent action. |
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Appendix: Arguing about Literature |
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537 | (32) |
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538 | (1) |
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539 | (1) |
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540 | (2) |
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542 | (1) |
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Choosing What to Write About |
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543 | (1) |
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Guidelines for Writing the Paper |
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544 | (25) |
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SAMPLE STORY AND ANALYSIS: The Use of Force |
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546 | (4) |
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SAMPLE STORY AND ANALYSIS: Conflicts in "The Use of Force |
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550 | (3) |
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553 | (11) |
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SAMPLE POEM: To His Coy Mistress |
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564 | (5) |
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GLOSSARY |
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569 | (4) |
INDEX OF SUBJECTS |
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573 | (3) |
INDEX OF AUTHORS AND TITLES |
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576 | |