Each Flipped Learning Module (FLM) is a set of short videos and online activities that can be used (in whole or in part) to free up class time from content delivery for greater student interaction. At the end of the module, students are asked to fill out a brief survey, in which we adopt the minute paper strategy. In this approach, students are asked to submit their response to two brief questions regarding their knowledge of the module.
In this FLM, students are asked to complete a fill-in-the-blank outline which accompanies all three videos, covering the topics of creating and evaluating claims and the structure of argumentation. The completed outline will enhance the students’ note-taking skills and will serve as a summary of the FLM that they may refer to in the future.
Key Terms
academic argument, fact, credibility, counterargument, argument structure, introduction, body, conclusion
Module Overview
- What is a Claim?
- Creating and Evaluating Claims
- What is an Argument?
- Claims: Definition and Examples
- The Structure of an Argument
Download Video Transcripts
Worksheet: Claims Outline
Please fill out the following outline while you are watching the videos, and bring a copy to class.
- An argument is a form of _________________________ writing.
- In academic writing, the purpose of an argument is to _________________________
- A claim is _________________________
- Three specific requirements a claim must satisfy are:
- (Requirement 1) _________________________
- (Requirement 2) _________________________
- (Requirement 3) _________________________
- A claim cannot be:
- (1) _________________________
- (2) _________________________
- A strong claim is:
- (1) _________________________
- (2) _________________________
- (3) _________________________
- The structure of an argument consists of the following segments:
- (1) _________________________
- (2) _________________________
- (3) _________________________
Download Outline
Video 1: What is a Claim?
Claims Online Activity 1
Review and complete the following table. Submit your response according to your instructor’s instructions.
Download Worksheet
Video 2: Creating and Evaluating Claims
Claims Online Activity 2
Review and complete the following table. Submit your response according to your instructor’s instructions.
Download Worksheet
Video 3: The Structure of an Argument
Please open Martin Luther King jr.’s “I Have a Dream” Speech on a separate page in order to follow along the explanation on video 3.
Claims Survey
Please answer the following two questions, and submit the responses to your instructor.
- What was the one most important thing you learned from this module?
- Do you have any unanswered questions for me?
References
Behrens, Laurence, Leonard Rosen, and Bonnie Beedles.
A Sequence for Academic Writing. Longman, 2002.
Lunsford, Andrea, John Ruszkiewicz, and Keith Walters. Everything’s an Argument with Readings. Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2007.
Schick, Kurt, and Laura Schubert. So What? The Writer’s Argument. Oxford University Press, 2014.
Turabian, Kate. Student’s Guide to Writing College Papers. 4th ed., University of Chicago Press, 2010.
See all Writing Program Flipped Learning Modules