Sign-up and make a note of the article titles and presentation dates that you sign up for below.
You
will be presenting your analysis in class along with two to five of
your classmates. The class will be counting on you to be on top of the
article you are covering, so please be prepared!
To
receive credit, you must participate in the presentation of your
analysis. You will be graded primarily on your written analysis
(breakdown of scoring below), but outstanding presentations will be
rewarded.
Read
the article that you will be analyzing carefully. If possible, read it
twice. On your first reading, just try to identify the main idea(s) and
get a feel for the writer’s approach and the flow of the piece. On your
second reading, go over the text more carefully; notice how the writer
constructs his or her argument. You will probably want to mark up your
text and/or take notes.
To prepare your written analysis:
Identify
the author’s name and the title of the article. Answer the following
questions. Put your answers in outline form (see sample analysis on the
reverse side of this sheet).
1. What is the central claim (or
thesis) of the selection? Your answer should be a complete sentence in
your own words (not a quote!). Be as specific as possible, but remember
that your claim should cover the whole article.
2. Is the central claim expressed explicitly or implicitly?
The claim is explicit if the writer spells out what it is. The claim is
implicit if the writer only implies the claim but does not state it
outright.
3. What reasons link
the evidence to the claim? In other words, why does the evidence
support the claim? Reasons may be presented explicitly or implied.
4. What evidence does
the writer present to support his or her claim? Specify and categorize
the evidence (e.g. examples, personal experiences, analogy,
authoritative opinion, facts, statistical data, cause-effect reasoning,
results of scientific experiments, comparison, interviews, etc. – see
sample on back).
5. Comment briefly on the persuasiveness of the article by answering one or more of the following questions.
· Is the argument convincing? Does it rely on emotional, ethical, and/or logical appeals?
· How do the style, organization, and/or tone contribute or detract from the persuasiveness of the argument?
· What is your personal reaction to the article?
6. Write a discussion question to
ask the class about the article. The best questions will stimulate
interesting discussion about the issues raised in the article. You may
also ask questions that “test” your classmates’ recall and understanding
of the article.
7.
While you read, you will come across words you do not know. Choose two
words and look up their dictionary definitions, and the context in which
they are used in the article or essay you read. Report them to the
class along with the rest of your report.
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