Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
360209 Journal of English for Academic Purposes 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•125 high school students in Hong Kong wrote argumentative essays.•Essays were evaluated for argumentative elements and quality of reasoning.•6 essays with exemplary argumentative elements were analyzed as case studies.•Patterns of inadequacies in the quality of reasoning were found in the 6 cases.•This paper argues that substance of arguments needs more highlighting.

In the present case study, 125 high school students in Hong Kong wrote argumentative essays following a modified Toulmin model that included claims, counterargument claims and rebuttals. From these, 6 exemplary essays in terms of their surface structure by the standards of the modified Toulmin model were selected and analyzed for their perceived quality of reasoning. This evaluation of quality was arrived at via questionnaire responses from 46 doctoral students who rated the 20 most common reasons advanced in the 125 essays. Findings revealed several patterns of inadequacies in the reasoning of the 6 cases, exposing the need to bring greater attention to the quality of reasoning in students' persuasive writing. An integrated assessment framework and analytic scoring rubric for argumentative writing are thus developed and recommended as a general guide for classroom use, taking into account both argumentative structure and substance.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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