C2 readers don’t just understand arguments—they inspect them. This unit trains “argument surgery”: spotting bias, diagnosing fallacies, and judging evidence quality so students can respond with clear, fair, and rigorous reasoning.
Swap emotional labels for precise description.
“This policy is a disaster” → “This policy may increase costs and reduce access in X cases.”
“If someone disagreed, what would they say is missing, exaggerated, or unfairly framed?”
“That doesn’t follow because…”
“That assumes X, but X isn’t proven.”
“Those two options aren’t exhaustive—there’s also…”
“That example may not be representative because…”
Identify the faulty logic clearly and propose a better version of the claim. The goal is precision, not “gotcha.”
“The data suggests…” · “This is consistent with…” · “A limitation is…”
“This may not generalize to…” · “The causal link remains unclear.”
Strong: methodology + context + limits.
Weak: anecdotes, vague “studies show,” unclear numbers, no comparison point.
Claim → reasons → evidence → assumptions → conclusion. If any link is missing, the argument weakens.
Bias? fallacy? weak evidence? irrelevant evidence? missing counterargument? unclear definitions?
Replace loaded language, add constraints, strengthen evidence, and rewrite claims with accurate strength.
Highlight loaded terms, missing context, and framing. Rewrite in neutral language.
Identify fallacies and explain the “break” in reasoning in one clear sentence.
Rank evidence (A–D). Justify using credibility, relevance, representativeness, and limitations.
Swap placeholders with real file paths. Keep links consistent:
/levels/c2/assets/.