mapping the issue

    The Rhetorical Situation   

    For your Issue Proposal, you organized your preexisting knowledge on your issue and sketched a plan for research. You then compiled several sources and summarized their contents for your Annotated Bibliography. For this paper, you will trace the history of your issue and map at least three different positions on it while maintaining your own neutrality.

    Before people can make an informed decision on a controversial issue, they must know something about how the controversy has evolved over time and the range of current positions on the issue. To meet this need, major news organizations often inform their readers of public controversies by providing a neutral, unbiased description of an issues history and the main arguments made on all sides, and academic organizations often map field-specific controversies in order to provide researchers with an overview of unsettled questions and unsolved problems.

    Your audience for this paper will be readers of a (fictitious) online magazine for UTA students that offers analysis and commentary about politics, news, and culture. The content will consist of a map of the controversy surrounding your issue.

    Reading, Brainstorming, and Drafting

    By this point you should have read several sources that provide background information on your issue and help explain how the controversy reached its current state. Draw from those sources to draft answers to the following questions:
    What caused this issue to emerge in the first place?
    What have been some of the major turning points in the history of the controversy?
    Who is currently interested in the issue and why?
    You should generate at least a page of content in this section.

    You should also have read several sources that advocate a range of positions on your issue. Do some brainstorming to come up with a list of at least three distinct positions that reasonable people hold.
    For each position youve listed, draft a description of it by answering the following questions:

    What are the main claims of people who advocate this position?
    What reasons and evidence do advocates cite to support their claims?
    What are the warrants or underlying assumptions of arguments that support this position?
    If you describe at least three positions in sufficient detail, you should produce at least a page and a half of content here.

    For each position youve described, choose a source that advocates for this position and summarize its specific argument.
    If you summarize three sources in sufficient detail, you should generate at least a page and a half of content here.

    Take two of the positions youve described and draft a comparison of them that identifies areas of agreement and disagreement. Also, explain what causes their differences. For example, do they simply have competing interests? Do they focus on different aspects of the issue? Do they draw from different sources of evidence? Do they interpret the same evidence differently?
    Then, compare the third position to the previous two, identifying its areas of agreement and disagreement with the first two positions and tracing the causes of its differences.

    You should produce at least a page of content in this section.

    Putting It All Together

    As you prepare a draft that youll share with readers, begin with an introduction (which need not be limited to a single paragraph) that accomplishes three goals:

    acknowledges what they say (see Ch. 1)
    provides an I say (see Ch. 4)
    answers the so what? and who cares? questions (see Ch. 7)
    For this paper, the they say is not a view youre agreeing with or disagreeing with. Rather, its simply the conversation surrounding the issue youve selected. Begin by summarizing that conversation.

    Your I say will not be a conventional thesis statement because youre remaining neutral rather than supporting a position. Instead, your I say will simply be a preview of what follows in the body of your paper.

    The answer to the who cares? question is the UTA student body or at least a sizable portion of it. To answer the so what? question, explain to readers why your issue matters to stakeholders.

    Once you have an introduction in place, feel free to arrange the content youve drafted in whatever way is most effective. One possible arrangement scheme is as follows:

    Introduction
    Background
    Description of first position
    Summary of first source
    Description of second position
    Summary of second source
    Comparison of first and second positions
    Description of third position
    Summary of third source
    Comparison of third position to first two

    Choosing an Appropriate Style

    Youre writing for publication and for a broad audience of readers youve never met, so your style should be more formal than in your Issue Proposal. At the same time, youre writing for a magazine, not a scholarly journal, so you dont have to write in stuffy, academic prose.

    Make sure you construct coherent paragraphs that include topic sentences and supporting sentences that stay on topic.

    The first time you reference a source, introduce it within the body of your text and, if possible, hyperlink to it. If you reference the source again later, just mention the authors last name. Make sure you enclose any quoted material in quotation marks. Dont use a formal system (e.g., MLA) for in-text citations because that is not the convention for most online magazines.

    Youll want to stick mostly to Standard English because this is the norm in publishing. Proofread carefully to ensure that your paper reads the way you want it to and that youve corrected unintentional errors. The Purdue OWL website (https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/) is a terrific resource for information on standard writing conventions.

    Specs

    Your paper should be no longer than 6 pages anything beyond that length will be considered a failure to adhere to one of the assignments basic requirements. It should be double-spaced, typed in Times New Roman font, with 12 – point character size and one-inch margins all the way around. Your paper should also follow MLA citation and formatting guidelines.

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