Schaffer Structure
Random Terms
Argument Structure
Name that Fallacy
100

This is what you use to support your topic sentence

Concrete details 

100

What is Logos?

The Appeal to Logic

100

This is the statement that you are making, taking a position on a particular topic.

Claim

100

Attacking the person making the argument, rather than the argument itself, when the attack on the person is completely irrelevant to the argument the person is making.

Ad Hominem

200

This is what connects your concrete details to your topic sentence

Commentary Sentences

200

What is a theme? 

What the author states about a topic
200

You will give these in order to support your claim- this works together with your claim.

Reasons 

200

When the arguer goes off on a tangent, raising a side issue that distracts the audience from what's really at stake. Often, the arguer never returns to the original issue.

Red Herring

300

What is last sentence of a Schaffer paragraph called

Concluding Sentence

300

What is the appeal to emotions?

Pathos

300

Facts, expert opinion, statistics, case studies, research, scientific outcomes, data, personal experience, observations, etc.  → all used to support a claim.

Evidence

300

The assumption that the opinion of the majority is always valid: that is, everyone believes it, so you should too.

Bandwagon Appeal 

400

This is the purpose of your paragraph

Topic Sentence

400

What is the appeal to the creditability of the speaker?

Ethos

400

Another position on the issue; a different position or perspective on the claim you are trying to prove

Counterargument/ Counterclaim 

400

When the arguer makes assumptions or generalizes based on limited observation or experience.

Hasty Generalization 

500

This is commonly used to teach Schaffer Structure

Hamburger

500

What is the triangle composed of ethos, logos, and pathos called?

The Rhetorical Triangle

500

The logical connection between the evidence and the claim.

Warrant

500

The arguer claims that a chain reaction, usually ending in some dire consequence, will take place, but there's really not enough evidence for that assumption. 

Slippery Slope