Emphasizing the practical and the local, THE PURPOSEFUL ARGUMENT: A PRACTICAL GUIDE, 2E effectively brings argument into real life with community-based writing activities, illustrating that the tools and skills of argument are critical to success in school-and well beyond. With a focus on accessibility, the text encourages students to argue in response to issues in a variety of environments-school, workplace, family, neighborhood, social-cultural, consumer, and concerned citizen-and learn how argument can become an essential negotiating skill in everyday life. It offers thorough treatments of Toulmin-based and Rogerian approaches to argument as well as teaches the value of fully understanding the opposition, the importance of aiming for the middle ground, and how to use a microhistory to forge an unconventional position. The only introduction to argument written with the today's diverse student body in mind, THE PURPOSEFUL ARGUMENT uses vivid explanations, detailed examples, and practical exercises to guide students step by step through the process of building an effective argument. In addition, a rich anthology of arguments covers a wide range of today's leading issues. Each student text is packaged with a free Cengage Essential Reference Card to the MLA HANDBOOK, Eighth Edition.
New examples vividly illustrate each of the four types of arguments covered in THE PURPOSEFUL ARGUMENT: A PRACTICAL GUIDE, 2E. These argument types are now spread over two chapters, with Chapter 8 devoted to Toulmin-based argument and Chapter 9 focused on middle-ground argument, Rogerian argument, and argument based on a micro-history.
Research is now consolidated in Part II, giving instructors more flexibility to assign when it best fits their class needs.
New assignments in end-of-chapter Keeping It Local boxes enable students to put chapter strategies into action on an issue relevant to their own communities.
Helping students maximize their study time, new checklists throughout the text consolidate the key features of particular kinds of argumentative writing and research.
Part IV: “How to Take Ownership of Your Argument: A Style Guide” now includes a guide for obtaining peer reviews of one's writing.
Twelve new essays in the anthology demonstrate how contemporary writers build arguments in response to specific issues affecting the seven communities addressed in THE PURPOSEFUL ARGUMENT: school, the workplace, family, neighborhood, social-cultural, consumer, and concerned citizen.
Easily create, assign, and grade writing assignments with Enhanced InSite™ for THE PURPOSEFUL ARGUMENT. From a single, easy-to-navigate site, you and your students can manage the flow of papers online, check for originality, and conduct peer reviews. Access a fully customizable, interactive and true-to-page eBook (YouBook), writing prompts for each chapter, private tutoring options, and resources for writers that include anti-plagiarism tutorials and downloadable grammar podcasts.
The text's companion website includes an Instructor's Manual, written by the authors, as well as sample syllabi.
Providing a practical approach and local focus throughout, THE PURPOSEFUL ARGUMENT first teaches students to analyze and identify argument, then work to plan and develop an argument using the specific strategies, and finally to stylistically understand their work.