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Writing curriculum
Argumentative Writing Unit
Writing prompts, lesson plans, webinars, mentor texts and a culminating contest, all to inspire your students to tell us what matters to them.
By The Learning Network
Unit Overview
On our site, we’ve been offering teenagers ways to tell the world what they think for over 20 years. Our student writing prompt forums encourage them to weigh in on current events and issues daily, while our contests have offered an annual outlet since 2014 for formalizing those opinions into evidence-based essays.
In this unit, we’re bringing together all the resources we’ve developed along the way to help students figure out what they want to say, and how to say it effectively.
Here is what this unit offers, but we would love to hear from both teachers and students if there is more we could include. Let us know in the comments, or by writing to [email protected].
Start With Our Prompts for Argumentative Writing
How young is too young to use social media? Should students get mental health days off from school? Is $1 billion too much money for any one person to have?
These are the kinds of questions we ask every day on our site. In 2017 we published a list of 401 Prompts for Argumentative Writing categorized to provoke thinking on aspects of contemporary life from social media to sports, politics, gender issues and school. In 2021, we followed it up with 300 Questions and Images to Inspire Argument Writing , which catalogs all our argument-focused Student Opinion prompts since then, plus our more accessible Picture Prompts.
Teachers tell us their students love looking at these lists, both to inspire their own writing and to find links to reliable sources about the issues that intrigue them. In fact, every year we get many contest submissions that grow directly out of these questions. Several, like this one , have even gone on to win.
But even if you’re not participating in our argument-writing contest, you might use these prompts to invite the kind of casual, low-stakes writing that can help your students build skills — in developing their voices, making claims and backing them up with solid reasoning and evidence.
And, if your students respond to our most recent prompts by posting comments on our site, they can also practice making arguments for an authentic audience of fellow students from around the world. Each week we choose our favorites to honor in our Current Events Conversation column .
Find Lesson Plans on Every Aspect of Argument Writing
Over the years, we’ve published quite a few lesson plans to support our annual argument writing contests — so many, in fact, that we finally rounded them all up into one easy list.
In “ 10 Ways to Teach Argument-Writing With The New York Times ,” you’ll find resources for:
Exploring the role of a newspaper opinion section
Understanding the difference between fact and opinion
Analyzing the use of rhetorical strategies like ethos, pathos and logos
Working with claims, evidence and counterarguments
Helping students discover the issues that matter to them
Breaking out of the “echo chamber” when researching hot-button issues
Experimenting with visual argument-making
In 2021, we also developed An Argumentative-Writing Unit for Students Doing Remote Learning that can help teenagers guide their own learning.
Teach and Learn With Mentor Texts
You probably already know that you can find arguments to admire — and “writer’s moves” to emulate — all over the Times Opinion section . But have you thought about using the work of our previous Student Editorial Contest winners as mentor texts too?
Here are ways to use both:
Learn from the Op-Ed columnist Nicholas Kristof’s writing process : One edition of our “Annotated by the Author” Mentor Text series is by Mr. Kristof. See what he has to say about the writing challenges he faced in a recent column and how he did the kinds of things students will have to do, too, from fact-checking to fixing grammar errors to balancing storytelling with making a larger point.
Get to know one writer’s rhetorical style : Many teachers use an “adopt a columnist” method, inviting students to focus on the work of one of the Times Opinion columnists to get to know his or her issues and rhetorical style. In 2019, an English teacher in Connecticut wrote for our site about how he does this exercise, in which his students choose from among columnists at The Times, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal.
Use the work of teenage winners to help your students identify “writer’s moves” they can borrow: Teachers have told us there is no better way to prepare students to enter our contest than to have them examine the work of previous winners.
On our current site, you can find the essays and letters of the top winners and the runners-up from 2017-2024 . Invite your students to read one and answer the questions we pose in all our Mentor Texts columns : “What do you notice or admire about this piece? What lessons might it have for your writing?” Then, have them borrow one or more of this student’s “writer’s moves” and imitate it in their own work.
We have also published two Learning Network books , one that collects 100 of the best student essays from this contest all in one place, categorized by subjects like “Teenage Life Online,” “Gender and Sexuality” and “Sports and Gaming,” and the other a related teacher’s guide to using them in the classroom.
Here is a roundup of ideas from 17 teachers and students for ways to use these “authentic, powerful and unafraid” student essays in several classroom contexts.
Finally, two new entries in our Annotated by the Author series feature student editorial contest winners from 2020 discussing their work and sharing tips: Ananya Udaygiri on “How Animal Crossing Will Save the World” and Abel John on “Collar the Cat!”
Get Practical Tips From Our Related Videos and Webinars
The video above, “ How to Write an Editorial ,” is only three minutes long, but in it Andy Rosenthal, the former editor of the Times Opinion page, gives students seven great pieces of advice.
Both students and teachers are welcome to watch our popular on-demand 2017 webinar, “ Write to Change the World: Crafting Persuasive Pieces With Help From Nicholas Kristof and the Times Op-Ed Page ,” which includes a wealth of practical tips from Mr. Kristof, as well as from Kabby Hong, a Wisconsin English teacher who works with this contest annually, and his student, Daina Kalnina, whose 2017 essay was one of our top winners that year.
Our guide to writing an open letter provides six steps to help students understand the format and write a powerful open letter of their own — with help from Times texts along the way.
Finally, you can watch our 2021 on-demand webinar, Teaching Argumentative Writing , that focuses on two key steps in the process: finding your argument, and using evidence to support it. You will also get broad overview of how to use our writing prompts and the work of our student winners to help your own students find topics they care about, and craft solid arguments around them. You can also watch an edited version of this webinar below.
Enter Our Student Open Letter Contest
The culmination of this unit? Our Open Letter Contest.
An open letter is a published letter of protest or appeal usually addressed to an individual but intended for the general public. Martin Luther King’s Letter From Birmingham Jail , the recent letter signed by over 1,000 tech leaders about the dangers of A.I. and this funny 2020 letter addressed to Harry and Meghan are all examples of this rich tradition.
Just as we did for our long-running Editorial Contest, we invite students to make an argument in 450 words about something that matters to them, and persuade us that we should care, too. But this time, students must address themselves to a specific target audience or recipient, institution or group — one that has the power to make meaningful change.
Whether students choose their parents, teachers, school board members or mayor; a member of Congress; the head of a corporation; or a metonym like “Silicon Valley” or “The Kremlin,” they should ask themselves, What do I care about? Who can make changes, big or small, local or global, to address my issue or problem? What specifically do I want them to understand and do? And how can I write this as an “open letter,” meaningful not just to me and the recipient, but to a general audience?
Here are the rules and guidelines for our Open Letters Contest as well as links to winning letters written by students .
As always, all student work will be read by our staff, volunteers from the Times Opinion section, and/or by educators from around the country. Winners will have their work published on our site and, perhaps, in the print New York Times.
Argumentative Essay Unit Breakdown
Argumentative essays are an integral part of the 9th grade curriculum. It can be difficult teaching the structure of the essay and its necessary components. So, we start with the basics.
1) We get familiar with the vocabulary. The vocabulary is on a separate page below. Most of the definitions come from the Springboard curriculum. We go over all of the definitions together, and the students can practice their familiarity with the definitions using Springboard online and the Zinc Reading Lab.
2) We practice identifying the vocabulary using assorted sample argumentative essays. The good thing about this part of the process is that you can find or create essays that best fit the needs of your students. I like to create essays that are relevant to topics that they are interested in. We go through each essay, identifying the hook, claim, concessions, refutations, evidence/support, and the conclusion/call to action. We also identify any ethos, logos, or pathos appeals that we find in the articles, as well as identifying the types of evidence. Some of my essays are shared below. This process helps them to see how to structure their counterclaims, refutations, and the body of their essay.
3) We then typically begin to read essays on a given subject. Due to the large amount of material in the Springboard curriculum on the value of a college education, we generally use this topic. I try to find more articles that shed light on the negative sides of college, because the Springboard articles focus more on the positive aspects of college. I want them to have an equal representation of both sides to maintain integrity, and so they will have enough information and evidence, no matter what side they choose.
4) After all of our research, I ask them to formulate a thesis on the subject. I give them a graphic organizer to help them keep track of their evidence and sources.
5) We go over the rubric and what each category of Exemplary, Proficient, and Emerging look like. We then look at an exemplary exemplar essay.
5) We go over a breakdown of the actual essay, in outline format. The first time we do this, it is extremely structured. You can create your own outline and the aspects of the essay you want included. Each time we write an essay, the outline is less structured, as I begin to wean them away from the outline.
6) They start their first drafts of the essay. They edit and revise. They start their final drafts of the essay, making sure they have used the correct format, and that they have documented all of their sources correctly.
7) They submit their essays. I grade the essays. We have a writing conference discussing the strengths and weaknesses of the essay.
Attachments
Argumentative essay vocabulary, argument article, argument article pg 1, argument article pg 2, elements of argument id sheet, support and evidence organizer, concessions and refutations organizer, essay outline, springboard updated essay rubric.
Leslie Perry-Hanley
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