Issues Analysis Review. Basic concepts Issues are complex matters that often involve debate and discussion and concern many people. Issues are usually.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Elements of an Argument
Advertisements

The power of persuasive techniques power point
Persuasive Writing – The Basics
CN-Speech Literary Terms Please take Cornell Notes on the following slides Write the word on the left and the definition on the right.
Persuasion Is All Around You!
Literary Devices Ms. Miller.
ELA 9 – Holy Trinity High. Your Task Write a Persuasive Essay.
Persuasive Writing.
 A central idea in Eugene Linden’s article is that animals have high mental abilities to reason and be skillful thinkers: ◦ State an anecdote in the article.
Persuasive Devices How to influence your reader. What are they? They are strategies that we use to try to persuade our readers to believe what we are.
Practice Persuasive Essay. Review ◦ Ethos ◦ Pathos ◦ Logos Remember: A good persuasive essay uses these techniques! Logos/Rational/Logical: Builds a well-reasoned.
The Art of Persuasion * * * * * How to write persuasive essays * * * * *
Persuasive Writing. The art of convincing? Can you convince me to…..
Essay Writing Elements of the Essay.
Introduction to Persuasion It’s everywhere!. What is persuasion? A way to convince someone or a group of people: to agree with an opinion to buy a product.
How writers use language to influence the reader
Mr. Terry.  The first step to writing an essay is knowing what type you are going to write and making sure that you understand how that particular type.
What Makes Good… Key Features of Texts Revision & Key Stage 2
Persuasive Writing What is it? Persuasive writing aims to convince the reader to agree with your point of view.
English Paper One. In the exam you will be asked to read a text and write about the layout, presentation and the language used – you will do well if you.
Rhetoric : the art or skill of speaking or writing formally and effectively especially as a way to persuade or influence people.
Elements of an Argument. Rhetorical Triangle pathos audience speaker ethos message logos.
The Persuasive Essay A Process Approach. PATH Purpose Audience Topic Hook.
THE MODES OF WRITING: HOW TO WRITE FOR DIFFERENT PURPOSES Created for Edmond Public Schools©
Learning Objective To know how to write for different purposes.
ARGUMENTATIVE OR PERSUASIVE WRITING Elements to Persuasive Writing.
Persuasive Rhetoric So What is RHETORIC? Persuasive Rhetoric Is …. The art of using language to argue and convince others to adopt a position or act.
R EVISING FOR TEXTUAL ANALYSIS F OCUS ON THE KEY ASPECTS OF THE POEM THAT YOU WILL BE ASKED TO REFER TO IN YOUR ANSWER IN THE EXAM / NAB: Central concerns.
Following an Argument This is an important skill needed when you answer Paper 1 Section A.
Persuasive Writing. Paragraph 1: Introduction What makes an effective introduction? It grabs the reader’s attention. It clearly implies an organizational.
Close Reading Tips and Tricks. Understanding Questions It is vital that you always use your own words. Only include a quote if you are asked to ‘pick.
An Introduction to Public Speaking. What is the purpose of a Speech? To inform your audience To convince your audience To teach your audience To entertain.
Argumentative Essays Ms. Sanders rocks Ms. Sanders rocks.
 Ask questions about what is happening in the text, exploring possible reasons for what is taking place or why characters act and react in particular.
Nonfiction Key Concepts
FOUR TYPES OF WRITING. Expository Essays Descriptive Essays Narrative Essays Argumentative Essays(Persuasive)
Hyperbole. An extreme exaggeration Exposition Beginning of a story that gives needed information.
Persuasive Texts Language Features Persuasion: what does it mean? “To talk someone into doing or thinking something.”
Persuasive writing is writing that tries to convince a reader to do something or to believe what you believe about a certain topic. It takes a position.
Rhetorical Devices How writers use language to influence the reader.
What is rhetoric? What you need to know for AP Language.
SPEECH Unit 3 Week 1. Speech vs. Written Work Written Work  Writer communicates his or her purpose through written expression.  If the reader doesn’t.
STEPS FOR PASSING THE AP RHETORICAL ESSAY 4 Components 4 Components 1) What is the author’s purpose? What does the author hope to achieve? 1) What is the.
Unlocking Tone Remember, when a person speaks, the audience detects the attitudes and meanings in the message by listening to the speaker’s tone of voice.
POW ER REV IEW for the 2008 Kansas Reading Assessment.
A GUIDE TO WRITING WITH READINGS Chapter 13 Persuasion.
This I Believe Writing Workshop Notes. Personal Writing Personal writing: –Communicates a central idea that has a deep personal meaning to the writer.
The Research Paper English 12. Argumentative Research Papers  Present a strong claim to a possibly resistant audience  You will gather evidence by looking.
FIGURATIVE LEXICON “Figuring it Out”. Figurative and Literal Language Literal: words function exactly as defined Figurative: figure out what it means.
Persuasive Techniques Mr. Ritenour English 10. Rhetorical Question Definition: A question that is asked, but is not meant to be answered. Instead, it’s.
 What’s going on here?  There’s no way to know for sure what goes on in a reader’s head. And every reader probably reads a little differently. This.
Persuasive Techniques
Issues Analysis Review
Elements of an Argument
HADAFOREST Your guide to Persuasive Techniques. Remember these and
Persuasion: All Around You!
Persuasion Vocabulary
Support Strategies for Narrative Writing
AF5 - To explain and comment on writers’ use of language
* * * * * How to write persuasive essays
Know Your Reading Strategies
Persuasive Techniques
Welcome to Jeopardy.
Persuasive Techniques
How writers use language to influence the reader
Support Strategies for Narrative Writing
Examples of Persuasive Strategies to Analyze
The Invisible Process to help with analysis:
Persuasive devices fall into these 3 categories.
Presentation transcript:

Issues Analysis Review

Basic concepts Issues are complex matters that often involve debate and discussion and concern many people. Issues are usually presented so that there are two clear, opposing sides: for and against.

Terminology Contention:  The point of a view of a particular person or group.  What the person thinks should happen. Argument:  A point or statement made to support the contention. Stakeholder  A person or group who is affected by the issue, and therefore has a say in what should happen.

Persuasive Techniques Inclusive language Rhetorical questions Statistics Expert opinions Puns Alliteration Anecdotes Appeals

Inclusive language Using language that makes the reader feel part of the issue. Look for words such as “we”, “us” and “our”. Example “We need to move Australia forward.” “It’s our problem, and we need to deal with it together.”

Rhetorical questions Questions that are asked but have an obvious answer or are not meant to be answered. Is meant to point out obvious flaws in arguments and raise awkward questions for the opposition. Examples “Why would a cow want to order a hamburger?” “You wouldn’t want a murderer to go free, would you?”

Statistics Using research and data to support an argument. Is meant to impress the reader with facts and figures. Look for percentages and numbers, and pay attention to words such as researchers, studies and surveys. Examples “95% of facts involving 95% are made up.” “One in five people have some sort of mental illness.”

Expert opinions Quotes and statements from people in established positions, often providing insight into certain attitudes and behaviours. Is meant to provide more weight to an argument by referring to someone who has a lot of knowledge. Look for terms such as university, professor, doctor and other professional people. Example: “Michio Kaku, professor at Tokyo University and a lecturer in computer technology, believes that one day robots will have minds of their own.”

Puns Puns are a play on words, which are meant to amuse and sometimes ridicule the topic. Examples: “Melbourne goes through stormy weather: NRL investigates salary cap breaches.” “Another person got electrocuted? Shocking.”

Anecdotes Personal stories or experiences that are shared to relate a point. Can usually be easily spotted through first-person perspectives and references to events past. Example “I take the train every day. I pay for my Metcard, stick it in the machine and leave. I don’t see why I have to take another plastic card out, flatten it against a scanner and wait for it to beep.”

Alliteration Repeating the opening syllable or sound throughout a sentence. Used to appeal to readers by using catchy phrases and draws attention to the issue. Example “Don’t diss the Demons.”

Appeals The author can appeal to the reader by aiming comments and remarks at a particular aspect of the audience’s mind. For example: Nationalism  “The Australian thing to do is to welcome people to our shores.” Fear  “You don’t want Mr Jones to come back, do you comrades?” Compassion  “You have to feel sorry for those kids who lost their parents and have nowhere to live.” Family  “Your children deserve to grow up in a safe environment.”

Modernism  “It’s the way of the future. Doing things the old way would be living like cavemen.” Morals  “Eating animals is murder. You wouldn’t eat another human; why would you eat another animal?” Freedom and choice  “Everyone has the right to be who they want to be. It is not up to one person to dictate who you become.”

Simile A simile is a statement that compares one idea to something else. Look for the words like, as. Made to point out a similarity between ideas, sometimes to ridicule them. Examples “Watching the Grand Final is as satisfying as watching pigs roll around in mud.” “Writing this essay is like trying to type without a screen and all your vowels are missing.”

Metaphor Instead of comparing something to something else, a metaphor states that something is something else. Example “Your brain is a sack of potatoes.” “Your potatoes are mouldy rocks.”

Attacks Using words or phrases that make a person look bad. Used to turn the reader’s favour towards the author and against the target. Example “The minister is selfish and corrupt.” “Management has absolutely no clue what they are doing. A bunch of monkeys could do better.”

Colloquial language Using common or slang words. Used to attract to a particular audience or to put the author on the same level as the reader. Examples: “Your son is a noob.”

Clichés Commonly (or overused) phrases that readers can easily recognise and relate to. Example: “He was like a fish out of water.” “That’s just the tip of the iceberg.”

Exaggeration Hyperbole (or exaggeration) is when the author inflates reality and makes it look much bigger or small than it actually is. Example “The millions and millions of Rock fans.”

Emotive language Using words that are meant to invoke a certain feeling or emotion. Example “The death was heartbreakingly tragic.” “What happened yesterday was nothing short of shame and embarrassment.”