0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (2)
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (2)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments

A Workbook for Reading Argumentative Texts - Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding (Hardcover): James E. Scheuermann A Workbook for Reading Argumentative Texts - Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding (Hardcover)
James E. Scheuermann
R1,615 Discovery Miles 16 150 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This Workbook is a collection of exercises and case studies designed to serve as a companion to Reading Argumentative Texts: Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding. The exercises and case studies track each of the chapters of Reading and provide opportunities for students to hone their skills at using the analytic tools presented in Reading, and to acquire additional analytic tools and concepts. These tools are illustrated through the analysis of complete essays from the mass media, speeches, a sermon, and passages from academic works. The approach is flexible and practical and avoids academic jargon and specific theories of argumentation. As is the case with Reading, this Workbook is grounded in two principles. First, that the meaning of an argumentative text is to be found in the statements that constitute the argument itself, in other statements that are more or less directly related to the argument, and in the structure and context of the text. Accordingly, while this book discusses the analysis of arguments, argument-types, and errors in argumentation (fallacies), it focuses equally on the other sources of meaning of a text. Second, there is no single, authoritative reading of an argumentative text. The interplay of these two premises informs the view that analyzing and understanding an argumentative text is an art and that, within certain well-defined parameters, there are "better" and "worse" readings of a text and not "right" or "wrong" readings. The principal sources of meaning discussed include: (1) the structure of the text (and so the book examines six types of introductions and teaches how to outline and summarize), (2) key sentences, phrases, and words in a text (so the book discusses ambiguity, the difference between factual and normative statements, irony, and rhetoric), (3) context (intellectual, social, political, cultural, and physical context), and (4) the logical connections between terms in an argument (including the four different types of arguments, fallacies, and the distinction between necessary and sufficient conditions). The book is designed to be used in late high school or early college critical reading, critical thinking, rhetoric, or writing courses.

A Workbook for Reading Argumentative Texts - Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding (Paperback): James E. Scheuermann A Workbook for Reading Argumentative Texts - Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding (Paperback)
James E. Scheuermann
R747 Discovery Miles 7 470 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This Workbook is a collection of exercises and case studies designed to serve as a companion to Reading Argumentative Texts: Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding. The exercises and case studies track each of the chapters of Reading and provide opportunities for students to hone their skills at using the analytic tools presented in Reading, and to acquire additional analytic tools and concepts. These tools are illustrated through the analysis of complete essays from the mass media, speeches, a sermon, and passages from academic works. The approach is flexible and practical and avoids academic jargon and specific theories of argumentation. As is the case with Reading, this Workbook is grounded in two principles. First, that the meaning of an argumentative text is to be found in the statements that constitute the argument itself, in other statements that are more or less directly related to the argument, and in the structure and context of the text. Accordingly, while this book discusses the analysis of arguments, argument-types, and errors in argumentation (fallacies), it focuses equally on the other sources of meaning of a text. Second, there is no single, authoritative reading of an argumentative text. The interplay of these two premises informs the view that analyzing and understanding an argumentative text is an art and that, within certain well-defined parameters, there are "better" and "worse" readings of a text and not "right" or "wrong" readings. The principal sources of meaning discussed include: (1) the structure of the text (and so the book examines six types of introductions and teaches how to outline and summarize), (2) key sentences, phrases, and words in a text (so the book discusses ambiguity, the difference between factual and normative statements, irony, and rhetoric), (3) context (intellectual, social, political, cultural, and physical context), and (4) the logical connections between terms in an argument (including the four different types of arguments, fallacies, and the distinction between necessary and sufficient conditions). The book is designed to be used in late high school or early college critical reading, critical thinking, rhetoric, or writing courses.

Reading Argumentative Texts - Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding (Hardcover): James E. Scheuermann Reading Argumentative Texts - Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding (Hardcover)
James E. Scheuermann
R2,155 Discovery Miles 21 550 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book is an introduction to acquiring and mastering tools you can use to better understand the meaning of nonfiction, argumentative texts. These texts include editorials in newspapers, magazines, and internet websites; articles, essays, and books in various academic fields (history, philosophy, political science, psychology, sociology); and printed speeches, sermons, and lectures.

Reading Argumentative Texts - Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding (Paperback): James E. Scheuermann Reading Argumentative Texts - Analytic Tools to Improve Understanding (Paperback)
James E. Scheuermann
R885 Discovery Miles 8 850 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book is an introduction to acquiring and mastering tools you can use to better understand the meaning of nonfiction, argumentative texts. These texts include editorials in newspapers, magazines, and internet websites; articles, essays, and books in various academic fields (history, philosophy, political science, psychology, sociology); and printed speeches, sermons, and lectures.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Hauntings
Niq Mhlongo Paperback R250 R195 Discovery Miles 1 950
The Cloisters
Katy Hays Paperback R380 Discovery Miles 3 800
The School Gates
Fiona Snyckers Paperback R277 Discovery Miles 2 770
The Matter of Everything - A History of…
Suzie Sheehy Paperback R352 R289 Discovery Miles 2 890
A Hunter-Gatherer's Guide to the 21st…
Heather Heying, Bret Weinstein Paperback R385 R308 Discovery Miles 3 080
Dark Matter - The New Science of the…
James Kinross Paperback R420 R328 Discovery Miles 3 280
Size - How It Explains The World
Vaclav Smil Paperback R420 R328 Discovery Miles 3 280
Free Association
Steven Boykey Sidley Paperback  (1)
R260 R203 Discovery Miles 2 030
'n Skerfie Glas - Elke Familie het 'n…
Erika Murray-Theron Paperback R191 Discovery Miles 1 910
Rationality - What It Is, Why It Seems…
Steven Pinker Paperback R380 R297 Discovery Miles 2 970

 

Partners