Big Idea 2 Skills: Interpreting Arguments and Evidence in AP Seminar

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Last updated 3:11 PM on 3/12/26
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25 Terms

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Argument

A reasoned position on a question or issue that includes a conclusion the author wants accepted plus reasons and evidence offered to justify it (not just a topic).

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Claim

A statement the author presents as true and wants the audience to accept; claims can stack (main conclusion supported by smaller claims).

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Thesis (Overall Claim / Conclusion)

The main position the author ultimately wants the audience to accept; the “therefore” point of the argument.

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Supporting Claim (Reason)

A statement that, if true, would make the thesis more believable; explains why the author thinks the conclusion follows.

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Subclaim

A smaller claim used to justify or strengthen a supporting claim within an argument.

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Claim of Fact

A claim asserting something is true or false (often signaled by “is,” “shows,” “data indicate”); typically requires accurate data and sound methods.

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Claim of Value

A claim that judges something as good/bad or better/worse (often signaled by “should,” “harmful,” “ethical”); needs clear criteria and reasoning, not just a single statistic.

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Claim of Policy

A claim proposing an action or solution (often signaled by “must,” “need to,” “ought to”); should address feasibility, tradeoffs, and likely consequences.

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Claim of Cause

A claim explaining why something happens (often signaled by “because,” “leads to,” “results in”); requires reasoning that rules out alternative explanations.

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Evidence

Information used to support a claim; becomes persuasive when it is relevant, credible, and properly interpreted (not merely because it is cited).

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Quantitative Data

Numerical evidence such as surveys, experiments, official statistics, and trends used to support or test claims.

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Qualitative Evidence

Non-numerical evidence such as interviews, observations, case studies, and ethnographies that provides depth, context, and perspectives.

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Expert Testimony

Statements from qualified researchers or professionals used as support; strength depends on the expert’s relevant expertise and credibility.

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Primary Source

Original material (e.g., a study, law, speech, raw dataset) that provides direct evidence rather than interpretation.

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Secondary Source

A source that interprets, summarizes, or reports on primary sources (e.g., reviews, analyses, many news articles).

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Anecdote (Example)

An individual story or instance used to illustrate a point; can clarify but is usually weak for broad generalizations by itself.

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Interpretation of Evidence

The author’s explanation of what evidence “means”; distinct from the evidence itself and may involve an unsupported leap.

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Assumption

An unstated belief treated as true without proof that must hold for the argument’s reasoning to work.

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Warrant

The underlying principle that makes evidence relevant to a claim (the “bridge” explaining why the evidence supports the conclusion).

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Line of Reasoning

The ordered chain connecting reasons and evidence to a conclusion; evaluated for clarity, consistency, and sufficiency.

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Deductive Reasoning

Reasoning aimed at certainty: if premises are true and logic is valid, the conclusion must be true.

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Inductive Reasoning

Reasoning aimed at probability: evidence makes a conclusion more likely but not guaranteed; conclusions should match the strength of the evidence.

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Logical Fallacy

A common error in reasoning that weakens an argument; effective analysis explains how the flaw reduces the claim’s support, not just the label.

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Corroboration (Triangulation)

Building confidence by checking whether multiple independent sources or methods point to similar conclusions; helps detect weak or misinterpreted “facts.”

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Source Credibility (Source Quality)

How trustworthy a source is for your purpose, based on authority/expertise, purpose and potential bias, evidence transparency, currency/context, and relevance to the research question.

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