More than ever, successful argumentation is a major part of academic success—and has plenty of real-world application. But students don’t benefit when they are bogged down with technical jargon and abstraction. That’s where Practical Argument comes in. Bestselling authors Laurie Kirszner and Stephen Mandell make argumentative writing accessible with a scaffolded, step-by-step approach to convey what students need to know about argument, in understandable language. The Fourth Edition includes an even more contemporary and diverse array of readings, as well as new coverage of the kinds of visual arguments students are likely to encounter in their everyday lives.
This textbook is a very good guide to argumentative writing. It has a good summary for students of the rhetorical triangle, ethical arguments, and common logical fallacies. Some of the readings they offer in the essays I find questionable. One example that comes to mind is that in place of an essay the editors have put in a transcript of a speech that one of their students gave with slides from the speech. And not in a section dedicated to student examples. Um... why? I applaud good students, but in a textbook I like real essays from writers with some real ethos. Just sayin'.
This book is well organized both informationally and artistically. My students really appreciated it's formatting and how much information it contained. I highly recommend!
Another semester as an adjunct, another completely new rhet/comp textbook thrown my way. No matter, this one is actually good! This isn't as advanced a book as I would like for it to be, but it is still quite solid, which is really all you can ask for. It breaks down all of the major rhetorical concepts in an understandable way and gives lots and lots (and lots) of essays as examples. This includes a sample essay that has its component parts labeled to illustrate exactly what's going on. VERY useful for students. In addition to this, there are student essays, professional essays, discussion topics with lots and lots and lots of opposing views to really dig into a subject, etc.
I haven't had a chance to teach with this yet, and I tend not to rely that heavily on textbooks anyways, as I prefer more digital media in my classroom, but I'm happy to have something like this. Too many books are entirely textbook or entirely reader, so for the price the student pays here, they're getting something pretty good, and for those that need a reader, you could certainly do worse, by a long shot.