Knowledge and Skills Statement
Provide students with several single-paragraph excerpts of argumentative texts and task them with identifying the intended audience for each. The paragraphs should contain enough information that students, with minimal inferring, can reasonably be expected to determine for what audience the author is writing.
Possible Questions:
- Are there any words in the text that indicate the author’s intended audience?
- What people or groups might be interested in the topic of the text?
- What is the author’s claim? Who might support/oppose that claim?
Further Explanation
This assessment requires students to identify the group for whom the author’s message is intended. In order to do this, students must first determine the author’s purpose.
Research
Wagemans, J. H. M. (2011). The assessment of argumentation from expert opinion. Argumentation, 25, 329–330. doi 10.1007/s10503-011-9225-8
Summary: This article introduces a tool that can be used to format an argument from a position of expertise and experience. The tool allows students to learn how to analyze opposing positions, and develop questions from a critical perspective. The tool fosters reading comprehension and writing skills.