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Explanation:
evaluate an author's argument and develop a written response of your analysis for the SAT essay. It will also show you how to use specific examples to support your analysis.
The SAT Essay
The newest version of the SAT calls for you to write an essay in response to an author's argument. It's increasingly important for college students to know how to summarize, evaluate, and synthesize the work of other writers. Knowing how and why an author presents his point, and whether it's effective, will help you to develop effective rhetorical strategies in your own academic writing. The SAT essay is optional. If you do opt to write the essay, you will have 50 minutes to complete it.
The passage that you will evaluate on the SAT essay portion is typically taken from a previously published source. The content will vary, but these passages are generally the same in the quality and type of writing. They're arguments intended for a general audience and should not be overly technical or difficult to understand. The passage will use evidence and logic to prove a point, and your goal is to identify and evaluate the author's argument.
The Author's Argument
So how does an author present an effective argument? Consider how you might convince a friend to see your side on a particular issue. Imagine that you have a friend who has decided to buy a puppy in a pet shop. As an animal lover, you know that pet store puppies are almost always purchased from puppy mills. You also know that there are millions of great dogs in shelters, just waiting to be adopted. What type of argument could you make to convince your friend to adopt a pet instead of buying a pet store puppy?
While you might be very passionate about the issue, yelling or name-calling doesn't usually get the message across effectively. The best way to present your argument is with logic, evidence, and an appeal to your friend's emotions.
Rhetorical Strategies
There are three major ways that authors present an argument:
Reasoning, in which the author presents a logical explanation of the argument
Evidence, in which the author presents statistics, facts, and studies to prove his point
Appeal, in which the author appeals to the reader's emotions to elicit empathy
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