Reference no: EM132196139
Question: What is the academic conversation that you are entering with this essay? What is the need to write this essay? What is your argumentative claim and overall argument throughout the essay? I like this idea of it being necessary to grow up. But that's been said before. What can you back up with a little bit of research? I thought you were going to write about the unique experiences of international students. Is that still the plan? There's only a little of that in this draft. Unlike your open letter, you are really vague in this and generalize unnecessarily and unhelpfully. Generalizing always misses something, that's why it's important to be specific. I would do some searching on scholar.google.com about the maturity level of international students. How does being an international student affect them in various ways: medically, psychologically, academically, etc?
Task: In this essay you are going to construct an academic argument based on the stance you took in your open-letter. This should be imagined as a peer-to-peer assignment, meaning that you are writing for an audience of undergraduate students. You will be creating an evidential and rhetorical-based defense for your position. This assignment also expects that you acknowledge the legitimacy of opposing views through strategies of concession and refutation. Imagine that you are answering a question in a complex, non-obvious manner. How will you attempt to prove that answer?
As you draft your final assignment for this course, consider these questions:
• How will you organize your claims and evidence to best present your argument?
• How will you presume counterarguments to your writing?
• Why is your argument important? What is the call to write this essay?
Upon completion of this assignment, I may ask that you consider submitting this to The Scarlet Review, Rutgers-Camden's first online, undergraduate magazine.
Information related to above question is enclosed below:
Attachment:- Requirements.rar