Academic Resource Center
Wheeling Jesuit University
Ground Floor Ignatius Hall x4473
www4.wju.edu/arc/
How Do I Write a Position/Argument
Essay?
Having a strong thesis has been important all along in your writing.
Having a coherent form to individual sentences, paragraphs, and the
essay as a whole has been important all along in your writing. Yet here
is where everything comes together, where the various compositional
forms (cause/effect, classification/division, comparison/contrast,
example/illustration etc.) may serve your argument. The good news is
that, unless you’ve been living by yourself in a cave for the past 18
years, you probably already know how to argue. The bad news is that
here in college, you’ll need to be persuasive, not loud. The point is
not to beat an idea to death, but to invite the reader to look squarely
at opposing points of view and conclude that the side you’ve chosen to
argue is, after all, the most reasonable argument. Let those
compositional forms work for you:
- You’ll be using illustrations and examples to flesh out your
argument.
- Since you want to be sure you’ve accurately addressed both sides
or positions in an argument before concluding that one or the other is
the appropriate response, you’ll need to rely on what you learned while
writing the comparison/contrast essay.
- Your premise and thesis will determine what the appropriate
form or forms will be for you.
- The bottom line is to be effective, and whatever combination of
forms enables you to be thorough, fair, and persuasive is what you
ought to use.
What to Watch For:
- A position/argument paper should have both a premise and a
thesis. A premise is what a writer bases his or her thesis on.
Example:
Abe Lincoln’s premise was that all people are created equal; his
thesis, that slavery ought to be abolished.
- ü Be very, very careful about holding up as self-evident a
truth that is substantially (if not wholly) subjective.
Example:
The abortion issue comes to mind: one person’s fetus is another
person’s human being. They’re both premises, but they’re both
subjective premises (no matter what your religion says to the contrary)
that must be argued reasonably before you can move onto your thesis. If
your premise is based on the infamous three words, “Because it is,” you
know it’s time to dig a bit deeper and explain why it is.
- ü Deductive and inductive lapses happen frequently.
Example:
How about the always fun “Real men don’t eat quiche. Cynthia doesn’t
eat quiche. Therefore, Cynthia is a real man”? You may be so persuaded
by your own belief system or point of view that you won’t suspect there
are people out there, including professors, who do not tolerate logic
fallacies.
Be aware of audience, voice, and tone in the paper. Particularly if
you’re arguing a controversial topic, there will be strong possibility
of venturing into an area where emotions run high and logic gets
trampled. Acknowledge the opposing argument and attempt to address what
is most compelling and troublesome in that position.
- Don’t lapse into the first, or ESPECIALLLY, the second person:
- First person may be acceptable if there is a useful anecdote you
can offer from your own experience.
- Second person implies that your reader has become either
the target or the accomplice of the writer, neither of which ought to
be the case.
- The tone should not become condescending, superior, or otherwise
degrading to the reader or any opposition group.
- Words like “obviously,” “of course,” “surely,” “without a doubt,”
and so on, are almost always an indication either of the irrational or
the unreasonable.
- Be sure, in other words, of diplomacy: that you convince and do
not offend.
Structuring the Position/Argument Essay
I. Introduction
- Ought to include thesis and premise or premises on which the
thesis is based. More than one paragraph is sometimes necessary.
II. Body
- May include justification for particularly subjective or
otherwise controversial premises.
- Always includes the sources of proof (including logic, facts,
statistics, personal experience, anecdotes and/or testimonials, and
research—if it happens to be a paper that allows or requires research).
- Address both positions before concentrating on the side you’ve
chosen, which may require adapting comparison/contrast form.
III. Conclusion
- Restates thesis and offers possible steps for correction or
improvement of the paper’s problem or topic