Position (1‚ 2‚ AC‚ NC): 2AC Debate Outline – 2nd position If you hold the 2AC or 2NC position‚ your job is to expose flaws in the opposition’s arguments. Your three main points should focus on what the opposition said‚ and explain why those arguments are flawed or invalid. Based on that‚ the language you use in your outline will be a little different. Read the below ‘base’ outline for assistance in writing your own outline. The outline below is written as if it were the 2AC position trying to
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Australian School of Business Banking and Finance FINS3625 Applied Corporate Finance Course Outline Semester 1‚ 2013 Part A: Course-Specific Information Part B: Key Policies‚ Student Responsibilities and Support FINS3625 – Applied Corporate Finance Table of Contents PART A: COURSE-SPECIFIC INFORMATION 1 STAFF CONTACT DETAILS 1.1 Communication with Staff 2 COURSE DETAILS 2.1 Teaching Times and Locations 2.2 Units of Credit 2.3 Summary of Course 2.4 Course Aims and
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Broad Course Outline Part A: The Basics (~7 weeks) Section 1. Introduction to Macroeconomic Issues Section 2. The Real Economy in the Short Run Section 3. The Phillips Curve and the Adjustment Process Section 4. Productivity and Long-Run Economic Growth Section
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Creating an Outline Once a topic has been chosen‚ ideas have been generated through brainstorming and free writing‚ and a working thesis has been created‚ the last step a writer can perform in the prewriting stage is creating an outline. An outline allows a writer to categorize the main points‚ to organize the paragraphs into an order that makes sense‚ and to make sure that each paragraph/idea can be fully developed. Essentially‚ an outline helps prevent a writer from getting stuck when performing
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Speech outlines are important because it allows us to put our ideas together and ensures that our ideas and points flow smoothly in our speech. It firms up our thesis statement‚ establish and organize your main points. Speech outlines act as a guide to put our information in correct sequence so that our audience can understand what we want to convey. In a speech‚ there are three main parts – introduction‚ body and conclusion. The outline can help us to connect the parts together to make it clear
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Australian School of Business School of Economics ECON 5103 Business Economics * * * Course Outline Semester 2‚ 2011 Table of Contents 1 STAFF CONTACT DETAILS 1 1.1 Lecturers-in-charge: 1 1.2 Pitstop 1 2 COURSE DETAILS 1 2.1 Teaching Times and Locations 1 2.2 Units of Credit 1 2.3 Summary of Course 2 2.4 Aims and Relationship to Other Courses 2 2.5 Student Learning Outcomes 2 3 LEARNING AND TEACHING ACTIVITIES 2 3.1 Approach to Learning and Teaching in the
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Formal Outlines Formal outlines use Roman numerals (I‚ II)‚ capital letters (A‚ B)‚ Arabic numbers (1‚ 2)‚ and lower case letters (a‚ b) to designate levels of importance. Formal outlines fall into two categories: sentence outlines use complete sentences‚ and topic outlines use only key words and phrases. In a topic or sentence outline‚ less important entries are indented‚ as in the sample formal outline below. I. A. 1. a. (1)
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(Note: If a student were to give a speech on how to do a speech outline‚ this is what he/she might turn in for an outline of that speech. This is only an example to guide the creation of your own outline.) Speech Outlining Example General Purpose: To inform Specific Purpose: After listening to my speech‚ my audience will know the basic format and guidelines for preparing an outline. Introduction I. Open with impact: Imagine you are going to build a house
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Topic: How to use an AED Specific Purpose: To inform my audience how to use an AED Central Idea: An AED machine is 3 ideas Introduction: I. Questions: a. Who has ever seen these signs hanging up on the walls on campus? b. How many people know what these signs mean? c. How many people know how to use an AED machine II. Mother: a. If it haven’t been for an AED machine and someone that knew how to use it my mother would have not survived the cardiac arrest III. Preview topic
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UNITED STATES HISTORY OUTLINES These outlines will make up the bulk of your work outside of the classroom. They are organized to cover the major issues of an era or a president’s terms. They take a significant amount of time to finish‚ but are usually the only assignment for a particular week. PROCRASTINATION WILL LEAD TO ALL-NIGHTERS THAT MAKE IT SEEM LIKE THE COURSE REQUIRES AN ENORMOUS AMOUNT OF WORK. Word to the wise‚ do a little each night. PURPOSE 1.The seemingly trivial identifications
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