Question detail

What should be included in the conclusion of an extended written argument?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Formulate enquiry and argument

Question

  1. A. A summary of the main points discussed
  2. B. New evidence that was not mentioned earlier
  3. C. A list of unrelated geographical facts
  4. D. A personal anecdote

Answer

The correct answer is A summary of the main points discussed.

Explanation

The correct option is A summary of the main points discussed. A summary of the main points discussed is correct because it directly matches the approved learning objective to develop an extended written argument. This belongs to Formulate enquiry and argument within Formulate enquiry and argument, so the answer must stay focused on the geographical process, evidence, place, or impact named by the curriculum. The other options are weaker because they move away from Formulate enquiry and argument, reverse the geographical relationship, or make a broader claim than the objective supports.

Common mistake

Misidentifying the main claim

Students often write a descriptive statement as the main claim of an extended argument, treating it as a fact rather than a position to be supported

Clarify that the main claim must be a clear, arguable statement that takes a position on the question, and that all evidence and reasoning should be organised to support this claim

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