How Does The 7 Building Blocks of Effective Arguments Work?

An argument is like a tower made out of blocks, each block helps it stand strong.

What Are The 7 Blocks?

  1. Claim: This is your main idea, like saying, “I want to eat ice cream.”
  2. Evidence: These are the facts or examples that support your claim, like showing a big scoop of chocolate ice cream.
  3. Reasoning: This is how you connect the evidence to your claim, like explaining, “Because it’s sweet and cold, I really want to eat it now.”
  4. Counterclaim: Sometimes someone might disagree with you, maybe they say, “I want cake instead.”
  5. Counter-evidence: This is what supports their disagreement, like showing a big piece of chocolate cake.
  6. Counter-reasoning: This explains why your evidence still works better, like saying, “But ice cream makes me happy right away!”
  7. Conclusion: This wraps it all up and says something like, “So I’m going with ice cream!”

These 7 blocks help you build a strong argument, just like stacking blocks helps make a tall tower! An argument is like a tower made out of blocks, each block helps it stand strong.

What Are The 7 Blocks?

  1. Claim: This is your main idea, like saying, “I want to eat ice cream.”
  2. Evidence: These are the facts or examples that support your claim, like showing a big scoop of chocolate ice cream.
  3. Reasoning: This is how you connect the evidence to your claim, like explaining, “Because it’s sweet and cold, I really want to eat it now.”
  4. Counterclaim: Sometimes someone might disagree with you, maybe they say, “I want cake instead.”
  5. Counter-evidence: This is what supports their disagreement, like showing a big piece of chocolate cake.
  6. Counter-reasoning: This explains why your evidence still works better, like saying, “But ice cream makes me happy right away!”
  7. Conclusion: This wraps it all up and says something like, “So I’m going with ice cream!”

These 7 blocks help you build a strong argument, just like stacking blocks helps make a tall tower!

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Examples

  1. A child argues that they should get dessert first by saying, 'I finished my vegetables.'
  2. Someone says, 'You're wrong because the sky is blue.'
  3. A friend explains why you should choose pizza over salad.

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