Purpose
Writing a summary of another argument is a first step toward joining an academic conversation and finding our voice within it. Writing a summary encourages us to understand another point of view fully and describe it precisely so others can understand. The next step is to assess the argument; that is, to decide whether it is valid. Is it a strong argument that we can wholeheartedly support? Is it partly right and partly wrong? Is it deeply flawed? In an assessment, we get to clarify our own take on whether the argument holds up under scrutiny.
Writing Task
Write a thorough summary and assessment of the article below:
Vivek H. Murthy. “Surgeon General: Why Im Calling for a Warning Label on Social Media Platforms” *I attached the article*
Requirements:
The essay should be at least 4 pages long (12 point font, double-spacing)
The summary section or sections should describe the key ideas of the argument, including the main claim, key reasons, counterarguments, rebuttals, and limits.
The assessment section or sections should discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the argument. What was compelling, persuasive, troubling, unclear, or problematic?
Choose phrases like Murthy argues/explains/shows … throughout to show the writers purpose at each point.
Write most of the essay in your own words, but consider using the occasional direct quote where the original word choice is critical.
The introductory paragraph should include the title of the argument, the authors full name, the arguments main claim, and your overall assessment of the argument’s validity.
Make sure each paragraph presents and then supports a single main point with specifics.
Edit the paper for errors in grammar, mechanics, punctuation, word use, spelling, and proofreading (see Chapter 11: Shaping Your Sentences). *I attached the book*
Cite paraphrased or quoted material from the book or article you are writing about, or from any other works, according to MLA guidelines. This assignment does not require a Works Cited page.
Suggestions for the Writing Process
1 Read or reread Chapter 2: Reading to Figure out the Argument, Chapter 3: Writing a Summary of Another Writers Argument, and Chapter 4: Assessing the Strength of an Argument. These are meant to guide you through the steps of this assignment. They include examples of summary and assessment writing and suggested sample phrases.
2 Read the sample summary and assessment paper to get an idea of what you are aiming at.
3 Reread Murthy’s article and make notes as you go on its claims, reasons, counterarguments, rebuttals, and limits.
4 Make an argument map. Note: Making an argument map can be helpful, but it can be tricky, especially if you are summarizing a complex longer argument. If you are getting stuck working on the map, the brainstorming questions *I attached them* will also help you think about the structure of the argument.
5 Review the grading rubric for this assignment. *I attached it*
6 Write a draft.
7 Revise the content.
8 Proofread for grammar and punctuation.

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