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Revising Argumentative Writing

Revising Argumentative Writing. AKA – annotating your own writing to help improve your writing so Mrs. Schulte doesn’t lose her mind whilst grading your writing. Writer’s Workshop = Revising, Rewriting, Reworking. Today – we will start the self-revision process.

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Revising Argumentative Writing

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  1. Revising Argumentative Writing AKA – annotating your own writing to help improve your writing so Mrs. Schulte doesn’t lose her mind whilst grading your writing.

  2. Writer’s Workshop = Revising, Rewriting, Reworking • Today – we will start the self-revision process. • If you do not finish in class, your homework is to finish it (based on these slides) and bring two CLEAN copies – PRINTED – to class tomorrow. • If you forget and have to run to the library to print before class, you will be tardy to class. But a tardy is better than a zero. “I've found the best way to revise your own work is to pretend that somebody else wrote it and then to rip the living sh*t out of it.”  - Don Roff (author and screenwriter)

  3. What to highlight? • Thesis = yellow • Main Idea sentences = pink • Evidence (quotes, facts, examples) = green • Analysis (what you said about evidence) = blue/purple • Make sure your separate evidence and analysis. • Link = orange

  4. Revising - Thesis *** Remember: Your thesis is the main message / argument of your paper. Presents the topic of the paper and states your stance. It should also tell the reader what the paper is about and guide your writing. • Read over your thesis and ask yourself: • Is this too general? • Do I have some kick-butt arguments that I support in my paper? • Is it clear what I’m trying to argue? • Do I pretend to be a reasonable person and concede one point to the “other” side? • Original thesis: We must save the whales. • Revised thesis: Because our planet's health may depend upon biological diversity, we should save the whales. CONCESSION vs LIST - ??

  5. Revising – Intro Paragraphs • Is my 1st sentence (or couple sentences) part of a STAMPy Introduction? • Do I ONLY have 1-2 (MAYBE 3) sentences to bridge to my thesis? • Is my thesis the last sentence in that paragraph? • Do I bring in evidence into my introduction? (If so, you should just light your paper on fire now….just kidding. Don’t actually do that!)

  6. Revising - Evidence • Underline your three claims in your thesis statement. • Number them 1, 2, and 3. • Go to body paragraph 1. Find your first piece of evidence (should be green). Ask yourself – is this the most effective, most convincing piece of evidence out of everything I read? • If the answer is yes, move on to your next piece of evidence. • If the answer is no, make some notes, do some work as to how it can be improved. What’s the “oomf” that is missing? • Repeat for each body paragraph and each piece of evidence. • Do you have three different sources within your essay? Citations? • If you are missing evidence within a body paragraph – FIND IT NOW!

  7. Editing - Conventions • Read through your paper and check for misspelled words (aka – red squiggly lines). • Check that every sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a period. • Check FANBOYS! Maybe circle every FANBOYS and check the punctuation rule for it. 

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