The Argument Paper
by George Brosi
Argument is the essence of academic endeavor. All research papers, even
theses and dissertations, are simply elaborate argument papers. The
conventions of scholarly writing which are appropriate for a three-page (500
word) argument paper are consistent with the requirements of a long research
paper, and they are the same as those required for any other college paper.
All papers should be written in a way which is accessible for any reader of
English regardless of background or country or origin.
Your argument paper should be typed in MLA style. Like your papers in high
school classes, it should have an introductory paragraph, a conclusion
paragraph and three to five paragraphs in between which constitute the "body"
of the essay. The introductory paragraph focuses the reader's attention to
your subject matter. It answers the questions, who, what, when, where. It
entices the reader to read on. Ordinarily towards the end of the introductory
paragraph is found the thesis statement which tells what the paper intends to
argue. It is permissible to employ two introductory paragraphs in some cases
and state the thesis in the second introductory paragraph, but the thesis needs
to be stated before the beginning of the body of the essay because the purpose
of the body is to support that thesis.
Each paragraph in the body needs to focus on one particular point that
substantiates the thesis statement. Each of these paragraphs should include a
concrete example or illustration so that the paper is cinematic and specific.
The conclusion paragraph should summarize the points made in the body of the
paper. Thus the writer needs to double check the body before beginning the
conclusion. Does each paragraph support the thesis? Does each paragraph
include at least one example or illustration? Does each paragraph make one and
only one supportive point? Once the paragraphs in the body are shaped up and
summarized in the conclusion paragraph, double check again to make sure that
the introduction promises exactly what the body delivers and that the
conclusion summarizes what the body does.
A strong argument paper is rigorous and exhaustive. The paragraphs in the
body are not simply random, but have a pattern which clarifies that the paper
covers the thesis totally. Thus if your thesis is that pacifiers are bad for
babies, your supportive paragraphs might show how pacifiers are bad physically,
psychologically or socially or they might show how they are bad for babies as
babies, as youths and as adults or they might show how they are bad for the
digestive system, the respiratory system and the circulatory system.
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