1 / 5

The Persuasive Essay

The Persuasive Essay. Parts of a Persuasive Essay. Introduction Open with an attention-getter (startling statement or statistic, quotation, anecdote, reference to the issue/occasion, rhetorical question) Introduce your topic Establish your credibility Allude to your first hand experience

neka
Download Presentation

The Persuasive Essay

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Persuasive Essay

  2. Parts of a Persuasive Essay • Introduction • Open with an attention-getter (startling statement or statistic, quotation, anecdote, reference to the issue/occasion, rhetorical question) • Introduce your topic • Establish your credibility • Allude to your first hand experience • Allude to sources of information you have consulted

  3. Continued… • Statement of the Facts • May contain circumstances, details, summaries, and narration • Non-argumentative presentation of the facts • Shows the significance of the problem/topic • Should be brief, clear, and vivid • Describe the problem, if there is one • Confirmation – where you provide your arguments • The longest and most central section of your essay/speech • Demonstrate your position on the topic at hand • Provide solutions for problems

  4. Continued… • Refutation • Consider the counterargument(s) that your opponent would come up with, and prove one of them wrong. • Often used with a concession (admitting that one of their points is correct) • If used with a concession, then you should point out a fallacy in the opposing argument or tell why your point of view is better. • Conclusion • Refresh the audience’s memory of your main points • Include a call to action (a response you want from the audience) • End with the audience’s being well-disposed to you – put them in the appropriate mood (happy, angry, etc.)

  5. Things to Avoid • Bias: a speaker’s personal opinions or beliefs regarding a topic issue or situation, especially if he/she is disregarding other equally-valuable opinions or beliefs. • Particularly important to avoid during the “Statement of Facts” section • A concession can help eliminate bias • Rhetorical fallacy: an argument that is not sound, but is still convincing. • Divided into three categories • Logical: depends on faulty logic (defective reasoning) • Emotional: appeals to the audience’s emotions • Ethical: unjustly advances the speaker’s credibility

More Related