When arguing a claim, it is important to clarify what an argument means academically and address it with intellectual honesty. The claim represents the starting and ending points of an argument. Claims should be phrased as statements, not questions, and should create potential for controversy by challenging the status quo. Properly phrased claims are specific, unbiased, and make the burdens of proof for each side clear. There are three types of claims: claims of fact, value, and policy. Different environments emphasize different claim types and losing focus in an argument can be addressed by reworking the claim or returning to it later.
2. Claims
Things to consider when arguing a claim:
Clarify what an argument means within an academic context
What matters is the quality of the argument
The outcome of an argument depends on the willingness of all participants
to address the argument in a spirit of intellectual honesty and goodwill
Foundation of all arguments is the claim
The claim represents the star ting and ending points of an argument and
the substance of an argument
3. Claims are phrased as statements and not questions.
The goal of a claim a pro vs. con debating argument
Questions encourage discussion while claims occur because of that
discussion
4. Claims should be phrased so that both sides have an equal
oppor tunity to advocate, suppor t, and defend their positions.
There is a difference between debating different claims
The focus needs to be clear
Claim should be unbiased to engage in a debate
Claim should be biased to end a debate
Language of a claim must be appropriate
5. Properly phrased claims should be as specific as possible.
The best claims indicate who, what, when, and where
Specific language leads to more focus
Being specific leads to limits the scope of an argument
Why is not included here
6. Claims must be phrased against the status quo in order to
create the potential for controversy.
Status quo= current beliefs, policies, rules, behaviors, or institutions
Can be three things
An individual’s status
Some institution’s current beliefs, values, or policies
The star ting point for an argument
Properly phrased claims must challenge the status quo
7. The claim should be phrased so that the burdens (obligations and
responsibilities) are clear to both sides involved in the debate.
Each side in an academic argument has three burdens to fulfill.
Burden of Proof
Side promoting the claim must give good reasons why the status quo is inadequate
Burden of Presumption
Defense of the status
quo
Presumption that the status quo is desirable
Burden of Rebuttal
Obligation to respond to the arguments of the other side
• REMEMBER: Both sides debate the same claim.
8. Types of Claims
Claim of fact- something existed, exists, or will exist
Claim of value- asser ts qualitative judgments along a good to bad
continuum relating to people, events, and things in one’s environment
Claim of policy- asser ts that something should or should not be done
by someone about something
9. Types of Debate Environments
Scholarly debate- emphasizes factual claims
Religious debate- meaning of text is essential
Political debate- emphasizes policy claims
Business debate- deals with claims of fact, and of future fact
Legal debate- deals with claims of fact and policy
Educational debate- usually called forensics
Social debate- unstructured and deals with all three types of claims
10. What to do When an Argument Loses Focus
1. back-off from the conflict/debate
2. Get back to the conflict/debate at a
later, more appropriate time
3. Go with the flow of the process
4. Rework the claim