Term paper Topic:i Leading Teams In Organizations
August 1, 2020
Compare and/or contrast Mrs. Mallard (Story of An Hour) and Sarah Penn (The Revolt of Mother). Both women live in a time period where the husband is e
August 1, 2020

Gender Coding

Create an argumentative essay of at least 1200 words arguing a claim based on Gender Coding. Include as many different types of sources as possible, at least (5), use 5-10 parenthetical citations and create a bibliography page of your sources. Take a position on this issue and offer a solution, a compromise, or continuation of the status quo.ARGUMENTATIVE WRITING: Deals with the changing, conflicting values of peopleSTRUCTURING THE ESSAY:A. Intro: Begin by intriguing the reader with a concrete problem. End with your solution that is the thesis statement.B. Supporting evidence: One or two paragraphs for each main argument. Fill paragraphs with examples, facts, values and logic that support the idea. Support should start strong and end strong. The less strong arguments go in the middle of the paper. Flimsy arguments in wastebasketC. Refutation: After raising your main supporting ideas, take time to consider one major objection someone might have against your views or proposal. If you dont consider objections, your arguments will be shallow and superficial.See the objections as valid points, not troublemakers.Dont label, dont ridicule.Now, pinpoint the fallacies, correct the facts the objection may have mistaken, or question the values of the objection.A second way to concede some truth is to offer a compromise. With heavy moral issues, compromise might be best, rather than trying to argue one position as better than another. The refutation section is probably the most important in the essay because it establishes your integrity as a writer, it forces you to consider your thesis more deeply, and it gives you a chance to make your argument even stronger.D. Conclusion: The conclusion can be a simple reaffirmation of your thesis, but usually it is better to look forward. Consider ending with a dramatic statistic or example, or paint a picture of how a less-effective plan would affect peoples lives.Quick check: I. IntroII. Support-lots of facts, examples, and evidenceIII. Refutation-acknowledge other viewpointsIV. Conclusionwhere are we going next?