In their article, “Proposal Arguments”, (2009) Lester Faigley and Jack Selzer assert that there are 4 main components to writing a strong proposal argument, which is very beneficial to easily constructing a sound proposal argument, but the bottom line is you have to a sense of what people care about, their views on the topic, and the ability to find obscure credible information to potentially alter their thoughts and side with you. Faigley and Selzer support their claims about proposal arguments through proper structure and user friendly explanations of the four components, which are understand how proposal arguments work, recognize components of proposal arguments, build a proposal argument, and a case study done by Thomas Homer-Dixon and S. Julio Freidmann. Their purpose is to provide novice writers with fundamental ammunition in order help them successfully write a proposal argument that will support their claims and alter the minds of opposing people. The targeted audience would be college students that are in a lower composition type of class or any person that wants to widen their knowledge on proposal arguments.
No comments:
Post a Comment