
Elements of an Argument
Quiz by Brittany Griffin
Feel free to use or edit a copy
includes Teacher and Student dashboards
Measure skillsfrom any curriculum
Measure skills
from any curriculum
Tag the questions with any skills you have. Your dashboard will track each student's mastery of each skill.
With a free account, teachers can
- edit the questions
- save a copy for later
- start a class game
- automatically assign follow-up activities based on students’ scores
- assign as homework
- share a link with colleagues
- print as a bubble sheet
6 questions
Show answers
- Q1This is the argument someone is trying to prove.refutationcounterclaimevidenceclaim30s
- Q2This supports the argument of the text.refutationcounterclaimevidenceclaim30s
- Q3This is the opposite side of the argumentevidenceclaimrefutationcounterlclaim30s
- Q4This shows how the opposing side of the argument is incorrect.refutationevidenceclaimcounterclaim30s
- Q5Why should a counterclaim be included in an argument?to strengthen your argument and show you are unbiasedto support the claimto help prove the pointto prove the claim wrong30s
- Q6Why do you need to include evidence?to clearly prove your claimto show the answerto make your argument longerso people will agree with you30s