Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Workshop Worksheet



This is the worksheet we followed for our Final Project workshop last week. If you would like to do the Workshop again on your own -- for another paper in another course, or because you have changed your mind about the paper you are writing for this course, whatever -- you are always welcome to do so. Good luck and I hope you are all having a good break!

Final Paper/Close Argumentative Reading Workshop Worksheet

Your Name: __________________________________________________________________________________________

The Text You Are Reading Closely in Your Argument: _______________________________________________________
BRAINSTORM! Take 20 mins. or so to write down 20-30 claims about your chosen text. Don't worry whether these claims are "deep," just write down claims you think are true and interesting about the text and be as clear and specific as you can.

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Continue on the back of the page if you like. The more claims you have to work with, the better.
Final Paper/Close Argumentative Reading Workshop Worksheet (PART TWO: In Class)

Your Name: __________________________________________________________________________________________

The Text You Are Reading Closely in Your Argument: _______________________________________________________
I. In groups of three: Discuss your BRAINSTORM and then PICK THE THREE BEST THESIS CANDIDATE CLAIMS and write them down in their best, clearest form here (Twenty-Four Minutes):

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2.

3.

II. Now on your own, for each of your three thesis candidate claims COME UP WITH THE STRONGEST OR MOST OBVIOUS OPPOSITION TO EACH THESIS (Ten Minutes):

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III. In NEW groups of three: Discuss your thesis candidates and their OPPOSITIONS and write down the results, reconsiderations, and re-edits here (Twenty-Four Minutes):

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IV. On your own, pick the strongest thesis and its best opposition and write them down in the template below (Five Minutes):

V. In NEW groups of three discuss your text, thesis, opposition, and textual moments that may support the thesis or provide a means to circumvent its objection. Also, determine whether any key terms need definitions (Thirty-Six Minutes):

Thesis:

1. (textual support)


2. (textual support)


3. (textual support)


Opposition:

(textual circumvention)


Terms requiring definition?

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