1: Introduction
- Page ID
- 27105
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Learning Outcomes
- Recognize ourselves as participants in a larger academic conversation.
- Explain how learning to write will help us academically, professionally, and personally.
- See reading and writing as tools for careful critical thinking.
- 1.1: Why Study Argument?
- Throughout our college and professional lives, we will be asked to analyze and write arguments. Writing arguments helps us develop slow thinking skills that are personally, professionally, and politically empowering.
- 1.2: A Closer Look at Fast and Slow Thinking
- Fast, instinctive thinking can lead us astray because of human biases, while slow, deliberative thinking of the kind taught in college can help us see more clearly.
- 1.3: What This Book Offers
- This book is meant as a practical guide to college writing. It starts with understanding and describing others' arguments, then moves on to assessing those arguments’ strengths and weaknesses and articulating our own points in response.