Key Concepts in Argument Analysis: AP Seminar Vocab Test 1

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48 Terms

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Alignment

Cohesion between the focus of an inquiry, the method of collecting information, the process of analysis of the information, and the conclusions made to increase understanding of that focus

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Argument

A claim or thesis that conveys a perspective developed through a line of reasoning and supported by evidence

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Assumption

Belief regarded as true and often unstated

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Author

One who creates a work (e.g., article; research study; foundational, literary, or philosophical text; speech, broadcast, or personal account; artistic work or performance) that conveys a perspective and can be examined

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Bias

A personal opinion, belief, or value that may influence one's judgment, perspective, or claim

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Claim

A statement made about an issue that asserts a perspective

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Commentary

Discussion and analysis of evidence in relation to the claim which may identify patterns, describe trends, and/or explain relationships

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Complex Issue

Issue involving many facets or perspectives that must be understood in order to address it

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Concession

Acknowledgment and acceptance of an opposing or different view

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Conclusion

Understanding resulting from analysis of evidence

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Context

The intent, audience, purpose, bias, situatedness, and/or background (larger environment) of a source or reference

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Conventions

The stylistic features of writing (e.g., grammar, usage, mechanics)

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Counterargument

An opposing perspective, idea, or theory supported by evidence

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Credibility

The degree to which a source is believable and trustworthy

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Cross-Curricular

Goes beyond the traditional boundary of a single content area or discipline

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Deductive

A type of reasoning that constructs general propositions that are supported with evidence or cases

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Evidence

Information (e.g., data, quotations, excerpts from texts) used as proof to support a claim or thesis

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Fallacy

Evidence or reasoning that is false or in error

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Generative Artificial Intelligence

Tools that use predictive technology to produce new text, charts, images, audio, video, etc.

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Implication

A possible future effect or result

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Inductive

A type of reasoning that presents cases or evidence that lead to a logical conclusion

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Inquiry

A process for seeking truth, information, or knowledge through a study, research investigation, or artistic endeavor/work

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Interdisciplinary

Involving two or more areas of knowledge

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Issue

Important problem for debate or discussion

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Lens

Filter through which an issue or topic is considered or examined

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Limitation

A boundary or point at which an argument or generalization is no longer valid

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Line of Reasoning

Arrangement of claims and evidence that leads to a conclusion

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Literature

The foundational and current texts of a field or discipline of study

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Perspective

A point of view conveyed through an argument

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Plagiarism

Failure to acknowledge, attribute, and/or cite any ideas or evidence taken from another source

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Point of View

A position or standpoint on a topic or issue

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Primary Source

An original source of information about a Topic (e.g., study, artifact, data set, interview, article)

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Qualification

A condition or exception

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Qualitative

Having to do with text, narrative, or descriptions

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Quantitative

Having to do with numbers, amounts, or Quantities

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Rebuttal

Contradicting an opposing perspective by providing alternate, more convincing evidence

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Refutation

Disproving an opposing perspective by providing counterclaims or counterevidence

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Reliability

The extent to which something can be trusted to be accurate

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Resolution

The act of solving a problem or dispute

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Scaffolding

The provision of temporary structured support for students to aid skill development

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Secondary Source

A commentary about one or more primary sources that provides additional insight, opinions, and/or interpretation about the primary source data, study, or artifacts

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Sequencing

The organization of curriculum content into an order which progresses from simple to more

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Solution

A means of answering a question or addressing a problem or issue

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Text

Something composed (e.g., articles; research studies; foundational, literary, and philosophical texts; speeches, broadcasts, and personal accounts; artistic works and performances) that conveys a perspective and can be examined

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Thesis

A claim or position on an issue or topic put forward and supported by evidence

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Tone

The way in which an author expresses an attitude about his or her topic or subject through rhetorical choices

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Validity

The extent to which an argument or claim is logical

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Vocal Variety

Changing vocal characteristics (e.g., pitch, volume, speed) in order to emphasize ideas, convey emotion or opinion, or achieve other specific purposes