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11.5: Key Takeaways

  • Page ID
    83665
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    • Sources add to the ethos of your argument by providing knowledge and perspectives that you don’t have.
    • An argument usually has a thesis (what you’re claiming), evidence, reasoning (how the evidence connects to the claim), acknowledgement (what someone who doesn’t agree with you would say) and response (how you’d refute that).
    • Crafting an argument can lead you to change your mind. If you can’t find a response for an acknowledgement, you might have to alter your thesis.
    • When you summarize sources, you restate their point. When you synthesize, you combine multiple ideas to turn them into something new.
    • When you synthesize, look for patterns.

    This page titled 11.5: Key Takeaways is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Arley Cruthers.

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