CONTEXT Subject Writer Reader Text.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
of English and Journalism Cuyahoga Community College
Advertisements

Reading Comprehension Standard 2.8 Evaluate the credibility of an author’s argument or defense of a claim by critiquing the relationship between generalizations.
Author’s Purpose.
How to Write a Critique. What is a critique?  A critique is a paper that gives a critical assessment of a book or article  A critique is a systematic.
Nonfiction Learning to understand and appreciate forms of non- fiction.
 Your task in this assignment is to analyze the strategies the writer uses.  Essay should be 4-5 pages, in MLA with a separate works cited page.  3-5.
Response to Literature Essay Writing. Intro. Paragraph with thesis statement* Body Par. #1 Body Par. #2 Body Par. #3 Concluding Paragraph.
Writing a Book Review Danika Rockett University of Baltimore Summer 2009.
Cultural Practices of Reading II. Cultural Practices of Reading Goal: To teach rhetorical reading strategies of complex, culturally situated texts.
Summary-Response Essay Responding to Reading. Reading Critically Not about finding fault with author Rather engaging author in a discussion by asking.
HABITS OF EFFECTIVE WRITERS & READERS How many of you mark up the text as you read? What do you do? How many circle words you don’t know and look them.
MS. BANE WRITING STRATEGIES. INFORMATIONAL TEXTS What are the features of “informational texts”? Provide information for a CONSUMER Uses STRUCTURAL FEATURES.
Rhetorical Analysis sourced from: www. sfcss
Nonfiction Learning to understand and appreciate forms of non- fiction.
 Any place information is found. Such as a book, journal, periodical, person, database, or Web site.
+. + Close Reading & Annotation Or: Here’s what you’re going to do with the text so you can answer the questions later.
CHARACTER, SETTING, PLOT Characters: people or animals that appear in the story Setting: time and place in which the story happens Plot: action or events.
Author’s Purpose (Why? Just why?). Author’s Purpose: the reason an author writes a particular work. A writer’s purpose could be any one of the following:
The Writing Triangle Writer Audience Text. Writing Context Writer Audience Purpose.
A Change of Heart About Animals
Writing Essays. What is an essay? An essay is usually a short piece of writing written about a certain topic.
Reading Nonfiction 7 th Grade Literature. Nonfiction O Nonfiction is a type of writing that deals with real people, places, and events. O Includes things.
Writing an Essay. The Academic Essay The academic essay is composed of 3 parts: introduction, body, and conclusion. Why? To communicate your position.
Week 7 Caleb Humphreys. Free Write (10 minutes)  Create a basic outline for your rhetorical analysis. Include your thesis statement and important points.
INTRODUCTION TO NONFICTION. WHAT IS NONFICTION? The subjects of nonfiction are real people, and the events are actual happenings. Nonfiction can tell.
Introduction to Criticism
It’s more difficult than it seems
How to Write About Context
An introduction to the nonfiction genre
APA Format Crediting sources
Hypothetical Notes to Background Genres and Intro to Cause Genres
Writing A First Look.
“What is the Horror Genre?”
Rhetoric and the Reader
*The Rhetorical Situation*
Prewriting: Considering Audience, Purpose, and Tone
Analyzing Superheroes
Text analysis Letter from Birmingham Jail
Citing Evidence.
Text Purpose.
Georgia Milestone End-of-Year Assessment
Activity 2.11: Understanding argumentative elements
Reading and Interpreting
Unit 1 Vocabulary.
Activity 2.2: What is the issue?
Synthesis Essay English 11.
Welcome to parents and students
SOAPSTone SUBJECT OCCASION AUDIENCE PURPOSE SPEAKER TONE
Point of View in Informational Texts
Authors Purpose.
The Critical Reading Process
Week 2, Class 2.
“The Rhetorical Situation”
Literature Section I Critical Reading.
Writing A critical Review
Starter Following what we covered in the last session, match the terms with their correct definitions. Mode Representation Genre Register Put these terms.
6th grade Unit Three vocabulary
Responding to Visual Text
Section VI: Comprehension
Approaching the Anthology A questions
Ask yourself these questions to help you understand what you read:
RWS 100: The Rhetorical Adventure Continues…
Thesis basics how to write a literary essay WH Auden’s poem and essay
IIF Fact and Opinion.
SOAPSTone Analysis Pre-AP English 9.
How to Write a Summary Text Read Annotate Write
S O A P.
Main Idea vs. Author’s Purpose
Identifying Author’s Purpose and Perspective World Lit DD
Looking at what a text says and how it says it. Norton 38-58
Presentation transcript:

CONTEXT Subject Writer Reader Text

Writer Who is the writer? What is the writer’s expertise? What is the writer’s relationship to the audience? What is the writer trying to do? (Why write this piece?) You can find answers to some questions easily; others, you might need to infer from the text itself; still others, you might not be able to answer at all.

(or, as best you can tell, the “target audience”) Reader (or, as best you can tell, the “target audience”) Reader What does the reader know? What does the reader probably think or believe? How is the reader likely to respond to the text? To what extent does the reader affect what the writer can (or will) write?

Subject What is the MAIN POINT of the text? Which parts are claims and which are evidence? What graphic features (font, layout, images, etc) help you identify what’s important?

Text tone structure complexity forum genre graphics length register conventions

CONTEXT What’s the situation: time? place? reason for writing? In what publication does the piece appear? (book? magazine? newspaper? blog? advertisement?) What is the apparent purpose of the piece? (report news? sell something? persuade someone? rant?) To what extent might the context limit what the writer can say? To what extent might the context affect what “counts” as reasonable evidence to support the writer’s claims?

Reading Strategies Consider the writer, target audience, subject, and context as you read the text. Look for graphic features that help you identify main ideas. Separate main ideas from claims, and separate claims from evidence. Evaluate the kind and quality of the evidence, and who well it supports the claims. Test your conclusions: talk with someone else about the text and your reading of it.

Writing your summary: The opening line Title: Author: Date: Publication: Genre: Writing your summary: The opening line As a general rule, it’s a good idea to include some information about the text you are summarizing.

Title: “Darkness Too Visible” Author: Meghan Cox Gurdon Date: June 4, 2011 Publication: Wall Street Journal Genre: commentary (in “Life and Culture” section) Title: Author: Date: Publication: Genre: In “Darkness Too Visible,” Meghan Gurdon says … In “Darkness Too Visible,” a commentary in The Wall Street Journal, Meghan Gurdon says … In her Wall Street Journal commentary, “Darkness Too Visible,” Meghan Gurdon says… In a June 4 commentary in the “Life and Culture” section of The Wall Street Journal, Meghan Gurdon says … Meghan Gurdon’s “Darkness Too Visible,” a June 4 commentary in The Wall Street Journal’s “Life and Culture” section, says …

Title: “Darkness Too Visible” Author: Meghan Cox Gurdon Date: June 4, 2011 Publication: Wall Street Journal Genre: commentary (in “Life and Culture” section) Title: Author: Date: Publication: Genre: In “Darkness Too Visible,” Meghan Gurdon says … In “Darkness Too Visible,” a commentary in The Wall Street Journal, Meghan Gurdon says … In her Wall Street Journal commentary, “Darkness Too Visible,” Meghan Gurdon says… In a June 4 commentary in the “Life and Culture” section of The Wall Street Journal, Meghan Gurdon says … Meghan Gurdon’s “Darkness Too Visible,” a June 4 commentary in The Wall Street Journal’s “Life and Culture” section, says …

Conventions you need to know and follow: Use italics for a “big” work, such as a book or newspaper Use quotation marks for a “small” work, such as an article, a short story, a song, or a poem Use an author’s first and last name ONLY the first time you mention the name; afterwards, use only the last name Once you’ve used the full title of a work, it’s OK to use only the first word or two in subsequent references When writing about a text, use present tense: “The author says”; “The article claims”