Argumentative Essay

Welcome to Today's English Lesson
1 / 21
next
Slide 1: Slide
EnglishMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 5

This lesson contains 21 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 120 min

Items in this lesson

Welcome to Today's English Lesson

Slide 1 - Slide

Today's Lesson Overview
  • To review the plan for the next two weeks
  • Write a mini essay on gun culture

Slide 2 - Slide

Plans for the Next TWO Weeks
This week: information about mock essay, writing a plan  

Next Week: write the essay at home and hand it in in Teams, 

Slide 3 - Slide

This Week's Lesson Goals
Main Goal: You can compose an argumentative essay of 225-250 words
Sub Goals: 
  • You can understand the purpose of writing an argumentative essay
  • You will know and understand the structure of an argumentative essay
  • You can write a thesis statement
  • You can understand the common mistakes to avoid while writing essays
  • You can understand the essay writing assessment criteria
  • You can apply the above elements when writing an essay

Slide 4 - Slide

Purpose of Argumentative Essay
  • To convince or persuade the reader that your position is valid
  • To influence the reader's opinion through your logical reasoning.

How do you provide logical argumentation?
By clearly justifying your position with facts, examples, and expert opinions. 

Remember: An argumentative essay is not simply a presentation of facts or a comparison of two objects or concepts. 

Slide 5 - Slide

Structure of Argumentative Essay
Introduction Paragraph 
  • Begin with a clear title that accurately describes your position.
  • To pique the reader's interest, use a hook or attention-grabbing statement.
  • Provide the necessary context, including definitions for any relevant keywords.
  • End the introduction paragraph with a thesis statement that states your position concisely.
Body Paragraph (Next Slide)
Conclusion
  • Summarize by going over your most persuasive arguments for taking a position on an issue.
  • Utilize words that strengthen your argument, such as "clearly, obviously, therefore, there can be no doubt, without immediate action, research strongly supports. "
  • Refute potential opposition in the conclusion

Slide 6 - Slide

Structure of the body paragraph
Body Paragraph
  • T (Topic Sentence): This is where you state the topic of the paragraph.
  • E (Explain): In this section, you will expand on your topic and inform the reader. 
  • X (Example): This is the point at which your paragraph becomes critical. You will need to provide a real-world example.  You will not be evaluated solely on the content of the reference, but on how you utilize it to support your argument. 
  • A (Analysis): This section discusses how your example supports your argument.
  • S (Summarize): This frequently requires restating your Topic statement in a more affirmative tone (bevestigende toon).

Slide 7 - Slide

Slide 8 - Slide

Thesis Statement
What is the purpose of a thesis statement? 
  • Indicates the essay's main points 
  • To present a targeted argument on the subject, offering an opinion, a claim, or an interpretation. The objective is to convince the reader that the claim will be backed up by factual evidence.


Slide 9 - Slide

How to Formulate a Thesis Statement?
State the main idea and give a reason to support the main idea. 

The government should/should not restrict smoking in all public places.

Example: The government should/must restrict smoking in public areas because everyone has a right to breathe fresh air and certain types of cancer will be reduced as a result of the restriction. 

Slide 10 - Slide

You need to know  a bit about the subject
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jY2PzzjO3zo

Slide 11 - Slide

Create a thesis statement with one argument: Should we allow private individuals to own guns, as is done in the US?

Slide 12 - Open question

Identify the structure
The purpose of this task is to assess your ability to recognize the structure of an argumentative essay.

Go to the google quiz below and follow the instructions on the activity page to do the task. (10 minutes)

Slide 13 - Slide

What do you know so far
You know the purpose and structure of an argumentative essay

You know how to write a thesis statement

Slide 14 - Slide

Common mistakes to avoid
  • Use of informal language: A) Nothing can't be done about it (Formal: There is nothing that can be done about it. B)Global warming can't be real (Formal: Global warming is unlikely). C) I think the government should prohibit smoking in public places (Formal: The government, in my opinion, should outlaw smoking in public places.)
  • Either no or excessive use of linking words: Firstly, Secondly, In addition to, Therefore, Thus, Overall etc. 
  • Use of pronouns (I, you, he/she, they, him, his) 
  • Sentence fragments: For better or worse ( What is better or worse? What is it modifying?), Because many people now have easy access to the internet (, the information is at your fingertip)
  • Using small letters for nouns (Name or Place etc.): Paris (not "paris"), George (not "george")

Slide 15 - Slide

Criteria for assessment
1. The plan to prepare the essay AND class work!
2. Structure and content of your essay
2. Language: Use formal language (avoid common mistakes), advanced grammar and idiom (use of synonyms)
3. Coherence: is the essay logical & are linkers used correctly?
4. Word count (220-260)

Slide 16 - Slide

Time to Write an essay: 120 words
Topic: Should we allow private individuals to own guns, as is done in the US?

  1.  Argue for/against gun culture
  2.  Write a plan first, raise hand when done, then write essay!
  3. Done? Solutions 8B and 8D, and ID 

Slide 17 - Slide

lesson evaluation: Mention 2 points that are crucial to essay writing

Slide 18 - Open question

How many words can you use?

Slide 19 - Mind map

What is your homework?

Slide 20 - Open question

Slide 21 - Slide