Rhetorical Situation
Rhetorical Choices
Claim, Evidence, and Argument
Sources of Information
Considering the Other Side
100

This collectively refers to the exigence, purpose, audience, context, and message of a text.

What is rhetorical situation?

100

 Writers' perceptions of theses guide the choices they make.

What is an audience's values, beliefs, needs, and backgrounds? 

100

Writers convey their positions through one or more of these. They should provoke interest and require a defense. 

What are claims? 

100

These provide information for an argument, and some are more reliable or credible than others. 

What are sources?

100

Not all arguments explicitly address it, but yours should. 

What is a counterargument? 

200

What a writer hopes to accomplish with their writing. There may be more than one. 

What is the purpose of a text? 

200

Writers make these in an attempt to relate to an intended audience’s emotions and values.

What are rhetorical choices? 

200

Writers defend their claims with these crucial items.

What are evidence and reasoning? 

200

The ways writers must acknowledge the intellectual property (words, ideas, images, texts, etc.) of others.

What is giving credit through attribution, citation, or reference?

200

In order to enhance their credibility.

Why do argument writers address opposing arguments and contradictory evidence?

300

This includes the time, place, and occasion 

What is context?

300

Writers use these in an attempt to relate to an audience. They must be shared and understood by the audience to advance the writer’s purpose.

What are comparisons (e.g. similes, metaphors, analogies, or anecdotes)?

300

Facts, anecdotes, analogies, statistics, examples, details, illustrations, expert opinions, personal observations, personal experiences, testimonies, or experiments.

What are types of evidence? 

300

The main, overarching claim a writer is seeking to defend or prove by using reasoning supported by evidence.

What is a thesis? 

300

Writers accept all or a portion of a competing position or claim as correct, agree that the competing position or claim is correct under a different set of circumstances, or acknowledge the limitations of their own argument.

How do writers concede a point?

400

The intended recipients of a text. They may have shared as well as individual values, beliefs, needs, and backgrounds.

What is the audience of a text? 

400

Writers’ choices regarding these influence how the writer is perceived by an audience and may influence the degree to which an audience accepts an argument. 

What are syntax and diction? 

400

Strategically selected evidence that relates to an audience’s emotions and values, and increases a writer’s credibility

What strengthens the validity and reasoning of an argument? 

400

When a source shows a limited perspective and fails to consider other evidence.

What is bias? 

400

Writers offer a contrasting perspective on an argument and its evidence or provide alternative evidence to propose that all or a portion of a competing position or claim is invalid. 

How do writers rebut a counterclaim?

500

The part of the rhetorical situation that inspires, stimulates, provokes, or prompts writers to create a text. 

What is exigence?

500

Because audiences are unique and dynamic, writers must consider these when making choices of evidence, organization, and language in an argument. 

What are the perspectives, contexts, and needs of the intended audience? 

500

Writers use this to introduce and explain the source material and evidence that supports their argument and claim. 

What is commentary? 

500

This requires consideration, explanation, and integration of others’ arguments into one’s own argument.

What is synthesis?

500

Writers demonstrate, using evidence, that all or a portion of a competing position or claim is invalid.

How do writers refute a counterclaim?