Sunday, November 8, 2015

So What? Who Cares?

Once again another great chapter that correlates well with our assignments, woo! Arguable Assertions gave great (and funny) examples of how important it is to be able to back up your argument, before stating it. I liked how they discussed that a good argument is like a good conversation, as it is useful to state more than one side. This was a good reminder for me as I feel I tend to get caught in the heat of the moment, and forget there are at least two sides to every argument! Listeners (and readers) often are more inclined to read something that is not solely one sided. Addressing the other side of the argument shows that you have done you research and understand there is another point of view besides your own. With this being said, evidence is extremely important. Arguments are essentially meaningless without any form of evidence to back them up. In our final paper, evidence will come mostly from our interview and artifacts we gained from research. This will help immensely in creating a beautiful final draft.

So what? Who cares? Was a very helpful read. Even just the name itself was helpful as it made me think back to my own writing and ask those questions. I loved that they gave templates and examples on how we can change our words around to answer the so what, who cares. By paying attention to this, especially when arguing for something, statements become more valid and readers will find more incentive to keep reading. Also, by doing this, it is clear proper research has been done and is being backed up.


When thinking of my thesis statements, this last reading helped me a lot. Thesis statements are the selling point of an introduction and I do not want readers to think so what? And who cares? I am still in the works of developing an impactful and concise thesis statement, and will post here when I am done!

1 comment:

  1. Sweet, sounds like you got all the good stuff out of the reading and I couldn't agree more that these reading from Zack (this one in particular) are very motivational in that we all can become good writers. These few tools keep us on our toes and have us thinking about why we are writing what we are writing and why would anyone care to be reading what we have written. When we build credibility through our writing then we will be trusted with our statements, but until then it's an awesome idea to link it out to another source for the readers to reference. I've found writing to be fun even though in the past I use to dread it, I give Antioch credit for that.

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