Guidelines For Proposal
Guidelines For Proposal
Guidelines For Proposal
Antonopoulos
The proposal gets you started early while emphasizing the problem/thesis
structure of academic papers. Here are the questions that can be adjusted to
fit your proposal as you move from a topic focus to a problem-focus.
NB: You will need to go through several drafts before you get it right.
ADDITIONAL TIPS
1. Write out the issue your argument will address. Then write out your
tentative answer to your issue question. This will be your beginning thesis
statement or claim.
2. Why is this issue controversial? Who are the stakeholders in the
controversy? Why don’t they agree? (For example, is there not enough
evidence to resolve the issue? Is the current evidence ambiguous or
contradictory? Are definitions in dispute? Do the parties disagree about basic
values, assumptions, or beliefs?)
3. What personal interest do you have in this issue? What personal experiences
do you have with it? How does the issue affect you?
4. Who is the audience that you need to persuade? What values, beliefs and
assumptions cause them to take positions different from yours? What
evidence do they use to support their positions?
5. Through idea mapping or free writing, begin planning your own argument.
What are the main reasons and evidence you will use to support your
position? As you generate reasons and evidence, you are likely to discover
gaps in your knowledge. Where could your argument be bolstered by
additional data such as statistics, examples, and expert testimony? Where
and how will you do the research to fill these gaps?
7. How can you respond to these objections and counterarguments? Take them
one by one and brainstorm possible responses.
8. Finally, explore again why this issue is important. What are its broader
implications and consequences? Why does it matter?
Write a researched argument [specify length] on any topic related to the subject
matter we have been studying. Early in your research process you must identify
within your topic area a problem, question, or controversy that requires from you a
contestable thesis statement supported by your own critical thinking. Use the
introduction of your paper to engage your reader’s interest in the problem or
question you plan to address, showing why it is both problematic and significant.
The body of your paper should be your own contestable response to this question
made as persuasive as possible through appropriate analysis, argumentation, and
use of evidence. Midway through the course, you will submit to the instructor a
proposal that describers the problem or question that you plan to address and
shows why the question is 1) problematic and 2) significant.
1. Before I read this text, the author assumed that I believed . . . [fill in].
2. After I finished reading this text, the author wanted me to believe . . . [fill in].
3. The author was/ was not successful in changing my view. How so? Why or
why not?
E. Sample Questions to Pose/ Spur Rhetorical Thinking
What’s the “news” in my paper? What constitutes old information and new
information for my audience?
Helps write connect new information to old information. Readers need to know the
“news” quickly—usually in the title or subject line and certainly early in the
introduction. But the news makes sense only when linked to the reader’s previous
knowledge and interests (old information).