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Week Ten: Asking the Questions that Matter
At this point in the semester, you have written and revised at least four papers. You are also, in all likelihood, somewhere near the beginning of at least four years in college writing papers. Where should you be right now? How can you assess your own progress? We would like to suggest that, at this point in the semester, you should have a pretty good idea whether or not you are generating passing work: you should be producing writing that dependably engages with the assigned readings, that takes a position, and that is well organized. How do you get your writing up to the higher levels, though? It's one thing to produce passing work-that, at least, insures that you'll fulfill your writing requirement-but what about getting beyond passing? For this tutorial, we'd like you to ask the same question of your writing that we do when we read it: what difference does it make if the argument that is being made is true? Or, to put the question more succinctly, so what? You're writing will begin to improve considerably when your essays begin to include clear answers to these questions. There are probably slightly friendlier ways to ask these questions, but we think it best not to mislead you at this point about how best to assess your own progress.
To begin the process of assessing your progress, we'd like you to identify the position you are arguing for in your current draft. Then we'd like you to apply the questions we suggest below to your position statement. Let's say that you've written an essay that draws on Goodall, Pollan, and Schlosser to argue that:
This sounds significant-it sounds like it matters, but how do you tell whether making such a statement is a notable achievement or not? To assess the significance of your own position, we invite you to ask the following questions:
Once you've subjected your position statement to this line of questioning, you're bound to find ways that both the statement and your essay can be improved. To return to our sample position statement, we can see that it doesn't stand up well to this initial round of questioning: while the claim does appear to establish a basic cause/effect relationship, it only allows a reader to agree ("Yes, there is a negative impact") or disagree ("No, there is not a negative impact"). What this position needs to establish is why it matters that there is an "over-dependence" on technology and what follows from acknowledging that relationship. Below is a revised version of the sample position based on responses to the WHY, WHAT, HOW, and SO WHAT questions:
As you can see, the revised position is more detailed. It provides an explicit explanation of context that has given rise to the writer's project and it concludes with an explicit statement of why considering this issue matters: it is this writer's contention that the rising importance of technology has produced a sense of "powerlessness and despair" in the human community. In the paragraphs that follow, it would be reasonable to expect the writer to explain just how this sense of powerlessness and despair is produced, offering evidence from the readings, and detailing its significance.
How will you know when your writing has improved? Does your position
matter? Can you show how and why others should care about the argument
that you've made? When you can show in your writing why your own position-what
the consequences of holding your position are-then you will be well on
the way to mastering the form of the academic essay. |
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