Title: Essay Writing Workshop 2
1Essay Writing Workshop 2
- Lawrence Cleary, ĂŤde OSullivan
- Regional Writing Centre
2Plan of workshops
- Workshops Weeks 6, 7, 8 and 9 (D1054b)
- Wednesday 1400 1500
- Thursday 1500 1600
- Drop-in/One-to-one sessions
-   Mon                  24 pm
-    Tues       1012   24 pm
-    Wed      1012   24 pm 6-8 pm
-    Thurs     1012    24 pm 6-8 pm
-    Fri        1012   Â
- Writing Centre www.ul.ie/rwc
3Workshops
- Session 1 Getting started Understanding the
essay question. Planning and organising your
essay. - Session 2 Developing an effective argument.
Structuring your essay. - Session 3 Citing and writing a reference page.
Strategies to develop writing. - Session 4 Academic writing style. Editing and
proofreading your essay.
4The thesis and the persuasive principle
- The instruction word will indicate that a thesis
is either called for, or not called for. For
instance, instructions that ask you to summarise
or outline something are not normally interpreted
as calling for a thesis statement. - The method of development and organisation will
suggest where the thesis will appear in your
essay.
5The thesis and the persuasive principle
- Your thesis is the basic stand you take, the
opinion you express, the point you make about
your limited subject. Its your controlling idea,
tying together and giving direction to all other
separate elements in your paper. Your primary
purpose is to persuade the reader that your
thesis is a valid one (Skwire, 1976 3).
6The thesis and persuasion Academic argument
- In college, course assignments often ask you to
make a persuasive case in writing. You are asked
to convince your reader of your point of view.
This form of persuasion, often called academic
argument, follows a predictable pattern in
writing. After a brief introduction of your
topic, you state your point of view on the topic
directly and often in one sentence. This sentence
is the thesis statement and it serves as a
summary of the argument you'll make in the rest
of your paper (UNC-CH Writing Center, 2004
Online).
7What is an argument?
- An argument is the case that someone makes, in a
theory or in their writing you give reasons for
saying what you do, and present evidence to
support what you say (Ebert et al., 1997). - Arguments can be explicit or implicit.
- Academic arguments require justifications for
their claims.
8Advancing the argument
- Advance your argument by giving evidence which is
valid and reliable. - Evidence can consist of facts or reliable
statistics, examples, educated opinions in the
form of quotations, or summaries and paraphrases
of ideas, from knowledgeable sources. - When referring to the opinions of those you have
read, be clear that you defer to the opinion, or
that you object to it (be critical but polite).
9Advancing the argument
- Anticipate and address counterarguments or
objections in order to strengthen your argument. - Present each argument fairly and objectively.
- Show the reader that you have considered other
sides of the argument. - Leave your reader with a sense that your argument
is stronger than opposing arguments.
10Advancing the argument
- Present counterarguments and explain both the
strengths and weaknesses of these arguments (they
should be balanced). - Concede points, even when you know that such a
concession weakens your argument. The goal is not
to be right, but to honestly explore the
question. - Qualify your statements.
- Expose questions that your opinion begs
- Your concluding argument should be strong and
positive.
11Persuasion and truth in academic writing
- Because they are argumentative, academic writing
tends to be persuasive. - An argument should be persuasive, but dont
sacrifice truth in favour of persuasion. - Academic inquiry is a truth-seeking pursuit.
- facts are distinguished from opinions.
- subjective truths are distinguished from
objective truths. - relative truths are distinguished from absolute
truths.
12Persuasion and truth in academic writing
- The integrity of the conclusions reached in an
academic essay or report is based on its honest
pursuit of truth. - Its persuasive quality is based on the quality of
its appeals. - Although largely dependent on logic, proof, and
method, academic texts do appeal to the readers
emotions and regard for authority as well as to
reason.
13Tips
- Leedy (2001 183) cites Marius (1989) in
highlighting 4 rules for an argument - state your arguments early in the game
present and interpret data - provide examples to support any assertion you
make - give the fairest possible treatment of any
perspectives different from your own may
support or disagree with them - point out the weaknesses of your own argument
by doing this you show objectivity as a
researcher.
14Tips
- Pursue your argument logically.
- Do not only describe, but evaluate and interpret
also. - Establish your argument in the introduction in
a thesis statement. - Advance your argument by giving evidence.
- Do not reiterate evidence already provided, but
refer back to something you have already stated. - Lines of argument should flow linearly.
- Paragraphs carry arguments.
15Essay structure
- Organise the essay so that the argument unfolds
in a clearly stated, detailed, logical, linear
progression and arrangement of ideas. - Introduction present the thesis, hypothesis, or
question that you will try to defend, prove or
disprove, or answer. - Sections to support the thesis
- Conclusions
16The introduction
- In academic writing, an introduction, or opening,
has four purposes - To introduce the topic of the essay
- To indicate the context of the conversation
through background information - To give some indication of the overall plan of
the essay - To catch the readers attention, usually by
convincing the reader of its relevance.
17The introduction
- The introduction has two parts
- General statements.
- General statements attract a readers attention,
and give background information on the topic. - A thesis statement
- States the main topic.
- Sometimes indicates sub-topics.
- Will sometimes indicate how the essay is to be
organised. - Is usually the last sentence in the introduction.
18The introduction
- Example thesis statement
- The status of women in Xanadu has improved
remarkably in recent years in the areas of
economic independence, political rights,
educational opportunities, and social status
yet, when compared to the status of women in
developed countries, it is still pretty low
(Oshima and Hogue, 1999 105).
19What should I put into the introduction?
- Identify the domain and the topic
- State the problem - claim, hypothesis, or
question - to be investigated - Gives the problem context and significance within
the research community - State the objectives and outline the plan
- Give a detailed description of what will follow
in subsequent chapters
20In brief.
- The introduction should be funnel shaped
- Begin with broad statements.
- Make these statements more and more specific as
the writer narrows the scope of the topic and
comes to the problem. - Be sure that the question, hypothesis or claim is
one that can be handled in a report of the length
specified. - This question, hypothesis or claim is your thesis
statement.
21Paragraph structure
- Essays are divided into paragraphs in a
meaningful way. - What is a paragraph?
- Series of sentences
- Coherent (introduction, middle, end)
- Common theme
- Every sentence in a paragraph develops one topic
or idea, and each paragraph in an argumentative
essay, likewise, develops the line of argument
that supports the thesis statement.
22Paragraph structure
- Paragraphs signal the logically organised
progression of ideas. - When organising paragraphs, the main idea in one
paragraph should flow logically into the next. - The flow of information should be organised
around themes and comments. - Shifts in the argument or changes in direction
should be accurately signalled using appropriate
adverbials, conjunctions, and prepositions.
23Paragraph structure
- Just as an essay is guided by a thesis statement,
a paragraph is organised around its topic
sentence. - A topic sentence informs the reader of the topic
to be discussed. - A topic sentence contains controlling ideas which
limit the scope of the discussion to ideas that
are manageable in a paragraph.
24Paragraph structure Supporting sentences
- The sentences that follow expand upon the topic,
using controlling ideas to limit the discussion.
The main idea is supported by - Evidence in the form of facts, statistics,
theoretical probabilities, reputable, educated
opinions, - Illustrations in the form of examples and
extended examples, and - Argumentation based on the evidence presented.
- Qualifying statements indicate the limitations of
the support or argument.
25Paragraph structure Concluding sentences
- Not every paragraph needs a concluding sentence.
- Concluding sentences can either comment on the
information in the text, or - They can paraphrase the topic sentence.
26Paragraph structure Unity
- Paragraphs should be unified.
- Unity means that only one main idea is discussed
in a paragraph. The main idea is stated in the
topic sentence, and then each and every
supporting sentence develops that idea (Oshima
and Hogue, 1999 18).
27Paragraph structure Coherence
- Coherence means that your paragraph is easy to
read and understand because - your supporting sentences are in some kind of
logical order - your ideas are connected by the use of
appropriate transition signals - your pronoun references clearly point to the
intended antecedent and is consistent - you have repeated or substituted key nouns.
- (Oshima and Hogue, 2006 22)
28Example (Meei-Fang et al. 2007, p.471)
- People with dementia are particularly vulnerable
to malnutrition they have a decreased ability to
understand directions and to express their needs
verbally, are easily distracted from eating,
prone to become agitated, and may use utensils
incorrectly. Inability to feed oneself (eating
dependency) is a major risk factor for
malnutrition among older people living in
long-term care settings (Abbasi Rudman 1994,
Durnbaugh et al. 1996). When people with dementia
can no longer take food voluntarily, assistance
is required although, as the disease progresses,
even taking food with assistance can become
difficult and, in some instances, tube-feeding
may be required to supply nutrition. This form of
feeding can, however, cause distress and anxiety,
not only for the person being fed, but also for
caregivers (Akerlund Norberg 1985, Burgener
Shimer 1993).
29Cohesive devices
- References
- Backwards (pronouns, demonstratives , definite
article) - Forwards (the following, as follows,
subsequently) - Substitution (so, one, ones)
- Ellipsis (the remainder, another part)
- Conjunction (however, for example, furthermore,
firstly) - Lexical cohesion (Repetition, Synonyms)
- Anaphoric nouns (this problem, this situation,
this view, this process)
30Examples Gillett (2005)
- Some of the water which falls as rain flows on
the surface as streams. Another part is
evaporated. The remainder sinks into the ground
and is known as ground water. - Ellipsis
- Genetics deals with how genes are passed on from
parents to their offspring. A great deal is known
about the mechanisms governing this process. - Anaphoric nouns
31Examples Gillett (2005)
- This first example illustrates an impulsive
overdose taken by a woman who had experienced a
recent loss and had been unable to discuss her
problems with her family. During the relatively
short treatment, the therapist helped the patient
to begin discussing her feelings with her
family. - Lexical cohesion
32Paragraph structure Transition signals
- Transition signals do exactly what it says on the
tin they signal. They can signal relationships
between sentences, just as they can signal
relationships between paragraphs. - Example Finally, there have been numerous women
altogether outside the profession, who were
reformers dedicated to creating alternatives
(Gillet, 2005 Online). - The signal indicates the final point in a series
of points.
33Paragraph structure
- Dos and Donts
- Do not use pronouns to refer to an antecedent in
the previous paragraph. - Lengthy paragraphs indicate a lack of structure.
- Short paragraphs indicate a lack of detail or
evidence to support the argument. - Do not end a paragraph with a quotation.
- Use a variety of sentence patterns and lengths to
give your paragraph a lively rhythm. - Signpost your paragraph organisation.
34What is a conclusion?
- A conclusion is a final result, a judgment
reached by reasoning, or the summing up of an
essay, book, or other piece of writing (ABC of
Academic Writing).
35The conclusion
- How you conclude your paper, like everything else
in writing, largely depends on your purpose.
Generally, though, a conclusion ends by reminding
the reader of the main points of the argument in
support of your thesis. - Otherwise, you may end with a reflection, a call
to action, an impact question (indicating,
perhaps, that you see scope for future research),
a quote, or advice.
36Elements of a good conclusion
- A conclusion should
- Remind the reader of the main points of your
argument - Bring closure to the interpretation of the data
(Leedy, 2001 291) - Be clear
- Be logical
- Be credible
37Elements of a good conclusion
- Demonstrate an awareness of the limitations
- Discuss the implications of the findings
- Offer suggestions for future developments
Remember A summary alone of what you have done
is a weak conclusion - End on a positive note final sentence should be
strong and positive
38In brief
- Whatever kind of conclusion you decide on, it
should not introduce new topics, apologize for
any real or perceived failings in the paper, or
merely stop or trail off. Make sure your paper
has a clear sense of closure (Ebert et al.,
1997 129)
39Sentence structure
- Vary your rhythm by using a variety of sentence
types and patterns. Use a combination of - Simple sentences
- Compound sentences
- Complex sentences
- Compound-Complex sentences
- Do not limit yourself to simple sentences or
linking sentences using and/but.
40Sentence structure
- Simple sentences are single independent clauses.
They have a subject, a verb, and express a
complete thought - Jesus wept.
- My aunt set her alarm and went to bed.
- Trevor and Máiréad are too young to be out
this late. - Im leaving at six and coming back at ten.
41Sentence structure
- Compound sentences consist of two independent
clauses. - I told him not to buy that car, but he just
couldnt resist. - I told him not to buy that car he bought it
nonetheless. - I told him not to buy that car however, he was
unable to resist.
42Sentence structure
- Complex sentences combine an independent clause
with one or more dependent (subordinate) clauses. - Subordinate clauses contain a subject, a verb,
but do not express a complete thought. - The relationship between the subordinate clause
and the independent clause is expressed by a
subordinating conjunction.
43Sentence structure
- There are three types of subordinate clauses
- Noun clauses That I had stayed up all night
working on it didnt seem to be important. - Adjective clauses The woman who is waving is my
mother. - Adverb clauses After adding up all the sales,
Mary discovered that the lemonade stand was 32
cents short.
44Sentence structure
- Compound-Complex Clauses consist of two
independent clauses combined with one or more
subordinating clause. - While driving to the shop, I was thinking that we
should reconsider our decision, and I told myself
that I would talk to you about it when I got home.