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Aris Academy
🎯 Rhetoric Skill

Clear Position

Your thesis statement is your argument's foundation. A clear position isn't just an opinion—it's a debatable claim backed by reasoning. Learn to write thesis statements that make NSW markers lean forward and take notes.

From Vague to Powerful

Same topic, completely different thesis:

Forgettable

"I think technology is good and bad."

Commanding

"While smartphones connect us globally, they erode the deep concentration essential for academic success."

What Is a Clear Position?

A clear position is a specific, debatable claim about your topic. It tells the reader exactly what you think and why. It's not a fact that everybody accepts, and it's not a vague observation—it's a reasoned argument that invites disagreement.

Here's the critical difference: A thesis statement answers the question "What is your argument?" A clear position goes further and hints at "Why should anyone believe you?"

The Disagreement Test

If nobody would reasonably disagree with your thesis, it's not a position—it's a fact. A real thesis should provoke this thought in your reader: "Hmm, I see your point, but I could argue otherwise."

The Position Strength Scale

Not all thesis statements are equal. Here's how to tell the difference:

Statement of Fact

Weakest

⭐⭐⭐⭐

"Technology has changed our lives."

Why: Nobody disagrees. This is provably true but has no argumentative power.

Vague Opinion

Weak

⭐⭐⭐

"Technology is good and bad."

Why: So generic it loses all meaning. Everyone holds this view.

Specific Opinion

Better

⭐⭐

"Technology makes people less focused."

Why: More specific, but lacks evidence or nuance.

Arguable Thesis

Strongest

"Mandatory digital literacy education from Year 3 would better prepare Australian students for the modern workforce than any amount of traditional rote learning."

Why: Debatable, specific, backed by reasoning, and reveals your argument.

Before & After: Five Topics

See how rewriting your position transforms your entire argument.

Technology (1/5)
Vague Position

Technology has changed our lives

No clear argument. Sounds like an opinion, not a position.

Clear Position

Mandatory digital literacy education from Year 3 would better prepare Australian students for the modern workforce than any amount of traditional rote learning

Why NSW Markers Notice This

Argument Score

A clear position directly impacts your Ideas & Argument score. Markers immediately see whether you have a real position or just a collection of vague observations.

Persuasion Score

Your ability to persuade depends entirely on having a position worth arguing. A weak thesis makes even strong evidence feel scattered and unconvincing.

The Clarity Signal

When a marker reads your thesis and immediately understands not just WHAT you think, but WHY, you've demonstrated sophistication. This is what separates high-scoring writers from the rest.

Try It Yourself

Transform this weak position into a clear, compelling thesis.

Transform This

"I think school uniforms are a good idea."

Hints: What specific problem does this solve? • What is your reasoned claim? • Who might disagree and why?

Tips for Strengthening Your Thesis

1. Answer "So What?"

After you write your thesis, ask "So what? Why does this matter?" Your answer should be in your thesis. "School uniforms reduce bullying" answers the question better than "School uniforms are good."

2. Be Specific, Not Broad

Compare "Technology is changing society" (too broad) with "Smartphone notifications have reduced classroom focus by rewiring teenage attention spans" (specific and arguable). Specific positions are stronger positions.

3. Invite Disagreement

A good thesis should make someone think "I could argue the other side." If your position is so obvious that nobody would disagree, it's probably just a fact. Move it to supporting detail and find a real argument.

4. Hint at Your Reasoning

The strongest thesis statements hint at WHY you believe this. "School uniforms are good" leaves the reason invisible. "School uniforms reduce bullying" reveals your reasoning and sets up your evidence structure.

5. Avoid These Weak Phrases

Watch out for "I think," "In my opinion," "I believe," and "Some people say." These signal that you're uncertain about your position. State it directly and with confidence.

Master Clear Position in the Writing Gym

Our Writing Gym has targeted exercises that help you develop strong, arguable thesis statements. Get instant feedback on your positions.

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