Effective persuasion does not simply advance a position — it actively engages with the opposition. The ability to counter arguments, construct effective rebuttals and maintain a focus on the issue rather than the person are marks of sophisticated persuasive writing and speaking. VCAA requires students to both analyse these strategies in texts and apply them in their own point of view work.
Addressing opposing views serves several persuasive functions:
- Credibility: Acknowledging the opposition signals intellectual honesty — the author has considered the full picture
- Pre-emption: Addressing objections before the audience raises them removes the objection’s power
- Demonstration of strength: If you can acknowledge the strongest version of the counter-argument and still defeat it, your position is demonstrated to be robust
- Audience management: Some readers begin sympathetic to the opposing view; a text that ignores their position loses them immediately
An argument that pretends no counter-arguments exist is weaker, not stronger, than one that engages with them.
The most sophisticated structure: the author concedes that the opposing argument has some merit, then rebuts it by showing that the conceded point does not ultimately defeat the overall contention.
‘While it is true that [opposing claim] — and this concern is understandable — it overlooks the fact that… Furthermore…’
This structure is more persuasive than outright dismissal because it:
- Positions the author as fair-minded and intellectually honest
- Prevents the reader from feeling that a legitimate concern has been ignored
- Allows the rebuttal to address the actual strongest version of the opposing argument (not a straw man)
Directly addressing and refuting a specific opposing claim:
- Identify the claim you are addressing: ‘Opponents argue that…’
- State what is wrong with it: ‘However, this claim relies on the assumption that… which is not supported by…’
- Offer evidence or reasoning that defeats it
Effective direct rebuttal:
- Targets the key flaw in the opposing argument (factual error, logical fallacy, unsupported claim)
- Does not simply reassert your own position — it engages with the opposition’s reasoning
- Is specific rather than general
Addressing likely objections before they are raised:
‘Some may argue that this policy would be too costly. In fact, the evidence suggests the opposite…’
This strategy takes control of the debate rather than responding to it.
Effective persuasion — particularly in spoken contexts — maintains respect for the person while challenging the argument. This distinction is crucial:
| Attacking the argument (appropriate) | Attacking the person (inappropriate) |
|---|---|
| ‘That interpretation of the data is not supported by…’ | ‘You clearly haven’t read the research’ |
| ‘That argument assumes X, which is not established’ | ‘Only someone who doesn’t understand economics would…’ |
| ‘There’s a simpler explanation…’ | ‘That’s a simplistic view’ |
Respectful language:
- ‘I understand the concern, but…’
- ‘There is some merit in that view, though I would argue…’
- ‘That’s an interesting point — my response would be…’
Powerful, contentious issues generate strong emotional responses. Effective persuasion and analysis requires the ability to engage with these issues with intellectual discipline:
This discipline is equally required when analysing persuasive texts: a student who is personally invested in an issue must still analyse how the text argues, not whether it agrees with their pre-existing view.
When constructing your oral point of view text:
- Identify the one or two strongest arguments against your position
- Decide whether to concede or directly rebut
- Use the concession-rebuttal structure for maximum credibility
- Maintain a respectful, argument-focused tone throughout
EXAM TIP: In the written analysis, identifying how an author uses concession and rebuttal is a mark of sophisticated analysis. Explain why this strategy is effective for the specific intended audience — not just that it ‘makes the author seem fair’.