BEFORE CLASS Pick up your quiz 1 and check results.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Faction One: Abnegation Read the excerpt from the passage: There is one mirror in my house. It is behind a sliding panel in the hallway upstairs. Our.
Advertisements

How to write a rhetorical analysis
Tentative Unit 1 Schedule Week 2 1/19- MLK Day-No Class 1/21-Using library databases (bring computer to class) 1/23- Intro to Exploratory Narrative & Source.
Writing to persuade or convince the reader.
Journal Entry 1 Focus: Rhetorical appeals
Practice Persuasive Essay. Review ◦ Ethos ◦ Pathos ◦ Logos Remember: A good persuasive essay uses these techniques! Logos/Rational/Logical: Builds a well-reasoned.
On-Demand Writing in 5 th grade What is it? On-Demand Writing is… Writing to a prompt in a limited amount of time –you will be given a choice of two.
Introduction & Conclusion Paragraphs
 Please take out a piece of paper and label it with the following: ◦ Name, Date, English, Period ◦ Title: Quiz R2.7 Make an Assertion ◦ #1-5.
The Essay and the Writing Process
BEFORE CLASS This is an excellent time to review the most important concepts from unit 1: Reflection as experiential learning Concrete experience Reflective.
Activity: Mon-Fri Log on and check your Dashboard for my comments!!!!!! Your goals for this week Organize your notecards Map out your main points Paraphrase.
Week 1, Class 2. The rhetorical triangle is a way of thinking about what's involved in any communication scenario. It involves three main parts: a rhetor.
Tentative Unit 1 Schedule Week 2 1/20-Using library databases (bring computer to class) 1/22- Intro to Exploratory Narrative & Source evaluations Week.
Question 1 If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you'll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood was like,
Tentative Unit 1 Schedule Week 2 1/19- MLK Day-No Class 1/21-Using library databases (bring computer to class) 1/23- Intro to Exploratory Narrative & Source.
TODAY’S GOALS Discuss editing and revision techniques Peer review EN first drafts Get practice with global and local revisions.
HSPA- Expository Essay You will be asked to write (at least) a 4-paragraph expository essay, similar to the SAT Writing prompt Topics are usually based.
TODAY’S GOALS Understand the importance of research questions Differentiate between quantitative, qualitative, broad, and determinate research questions.
Writing the Persuasive Essay. Following the Prompt To begin a persuasive essay, you must first have an opinion you want others to share. The writer’s.
Before Class Please submit your homework Check quiz grades (please return these before the end of class)
What Makes an Essay an Essay. Essay is defined as a short piece of composition written from a writer’s point of view that is most commonly linked to an.
TODAY’S GOALS Wrap up and reflect on unit 1 material Introduce concepts of rhetoric, argument, and rhetorical appeals.
TODAY’S GOALS Review and reflect on most important concepts from class thus far Plan material and strategies for unit 4 Peer review second draft of Informative.
Today’s Goals Review remaining ENC1101 vocabulary Learn basic terminology for discussing research Brainstorm possible topics of inquiry for your first.
TODAY’S GOALS Discuss important skills for timed writing Review relevant material for the final exam Practice outlining for a timed writing exam.
Tentative Unit 1 Schedule Week 2 1/19- MLK Day-No Class 1/21-Using library databases (bring computer to class) 1/23- Intro to Exploratory Narrative & Source.
Morning Check-In Look over the three that you created. Put an (*) next to the one that you feel is the strongest.
The Components of a Mini-Essay by Mr. Duncan - presented only as a reference.
May 2009 Of Mice and Men Essay.
Writing the Persuasive Essay. Following the Prompt To begin a persuasive essay, you must first have an opinion you want others to share. The writer’s.
Today’s goals Evaluate the final class media project
On-Demand Writing in 8 th grade What is it? On-Demand Writing is… Writing to a prompt in a limited amount of time. You will be: –given a choice of two.
Personal Statement: How to write a personal statements for scholarships.
Unit 2 Research Proposal Schedule (Updated) Week 6 2/19-Intro to research proposals & primary research Week 7 2/24-Interviews & Observations 2/26-Surveys.
Tentative Unit 1 Schedule Week 2 1/19- MLK Day-No Class 1/21-Using library databases (bring computer to class) 1/23- Intro to Exploratory Narrative & Source.
TODAY’S GOALS Introduce Major Essay 1: Write to Reflect Review sample reflective writings Brainstorm possible topics for Major Essay 1 Continue discussion.
Writing a Persuasive Essay It's so much fun!!!
THE ESSAY From the French ‘essai’ - attempt English ‘assay’ – ‘try’ or ‘to weigh’
Narration Essay. Narration is a piece of writing that tells a story of an event or experience. It’s usually easy and fun to write.
Argumentation The act or process of giving reasons for or against something. The act or process of making and presenting arguments.  MAKING A CLAIM 
Module 2A: Unit 2: Lesson 2 Reading Closely: Introducing Chávez’s Commonwealth Club Address and Considering the Plight of the Farmworker.
TODAY’S GOALS Peer review the first draft of our research proposals Learn the requirements and uses of an abstract and how to draft one Wrap up unit 2.
TODAY’S GOALS Continue developing preparations for the class debate Learn advanced strategies for addressing counterarguments.
Today’s Goals Learn a new strategy for interpreting visual rhetoric Review and reflect on most important concepts from class thus far Plan material and.
Before Class This is an excellent time to review unit 1 material Focus on our most important concepts: Exploratory narratives (as a genre) Serial position.
Essay Writing 101 By Mrs. Robinson. Essays prove a point or opinion about something -There is a lesson in every essay.
Essay Writing.
Tentative Unit 1 Schedule Week 2 1/19- MLK Day-No Class 1/21-Using library databases (bring computer to class) 1/23- Intro to Exploratory Narrative & Source.
Rhetorical Chew! Rebecca Singley Stratford High School mrssingleyssource.weebly.com Digging Your TEETh In.
Tentative Unit 1 Schedule Week 2 1/20-Using library databases (bring computer to class) 1/22- Intro to Exploratory Narrative & Source evaluations Week.
Before Class This is an excellent time to review unit 1 material Focus on our most important concepts: Exploratory narratives (as a genre) Serial position.
Day 16 Objectives SWBATD analysis by identifying an author’s implicit and stated assumptions about a subject, based upon evidence in the selection. Language:
Daily Warm-up: What points would you make if you were presenting an argument against the uniforms to Ms. Rains and Ms. Roach? Homework: Reading Plus due.
TODAY’S GOALS Learn about the importance of and strategies for reflective writing Understand the place of reflective writing in an exploratory narrative.
Warm up 1 Take a syllabus from the front table marked with your hour by it. Read through. Write 3 sentences on what you learned from the syllabus.
Persuasive Writing Writing to persuade or convince the reader.
The Write Stuff. Why Should I Care About Writing? Writing is an essential job skill Builds your ability to explain complex positions Develops communication.
TODAY’S GOALS Continue developing strategies for working with rhetorical context Practice using ethos, pathos, and logos Discuss expectations for online.
Today’s goals Introduce elements of writing style
Today’s Goals Get instructor approval for selected ads (for visual analysis essay) Begin composing visual analysis essay.
Today’s Goals Introduce strategies for closed form prose body paragraphs Discuss ways to integrate source evidence into our writing.
Today’s goals Introduce Major Essay 2: Write to Inform (WTI) essays
Argumentative Writing
THE ESSAY From the French ‘essai’ - attempt
today’s goals Review the most important elements of our WTI essays
Tentative Unit 1 Schedule
Today’s Goals Get instructor approval for selected ads (for visual analysis essay) Begin composing visual analysis essay.
Essay Writing: The 5 Paragraph Essay
Putting together your final paper
Presentation transcript:

BEFORE CLASS Pick up your quiz 1 and check results

QUIZ 1 1.Pathos could be best defined as a rhetorical appeal using: (20 pts) a)Data and hard facts b)Morality or credibility c)Emotions or beliefs (correct answer) d)Both sides of an issue presented equally 2.In order to make an ethos appeal, an author could: (20 pts) a)Use topics or ideas their readers will care about b)Cite credible sources and authors (correct answer) c)Present convincing statistics and facts d)All of the above 3.What are wallowing in complexity and the believing and doubting game? How are they related? (10 pts) 4.Name the three elements of rhetorical context (not the rhetorical appeals!). Explain what they are and give an example of how each might affect a piece of writing. (30 pts) 5.According to the syllabus and our class discussions, what are two reasons you could be in danger of failing ENC1102? (20 pts) Extra credit: what are the main differences between open and closed form prose? Give an example of each. (+10 pts)

TODAY’S GOALS Understand the importance, rhetorically and psychologically, of introductions Examine successful exploratory narrative introduction strategies Brainstorm possible introduction strategies for your exploratory narrative

NAME THAT INTRODUCTION! Objective: identify which famous piece of literature each introduction is from The group with the most correct identifications will get +10 points on their quiz 1 grades But also consider: What do these introductions have in common? How is what is presented in the introduction related to the rest of the text? What strategies do these introductions use to grab reader attention?

NAME THAT INTRODUCTION! “Mr. and Mrs. XXXX, of number four, XXXX Drive, were proud to say that they were perfectly normal, thank you very much. They were the last people you’d expect to be involved in anything strange or mysterious, because they just didn’t hold with such nonsense.”

NAME THAT INTRODUCTION! “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.”

NAME THAT INTRODUCTION! “My mother drove me to the airport with the windows rolled down. It was seventy-five degrees in Phoenix, the sky a perfect, cloudless blue. I was wearing my favorite shirt—sleeveless, white eyelet lace; I was wearing it as a farewell gesture. My carry-on item was a parka.”

NAME THAT INTRODUCTION! “There is one mirror in my house. It is behind a sliding panel in the hallway upstairs. Our faction allows me to stand in front of it on the second day of every third month, the day my mother cuts my hair.”

NAME THAT INTRODUCTION! -LIGHTNING ROUND Raise your hand if you can identify any of the following: “Call me Ishmael.” “When I had journeyed half of our life’s way, I found myself within a shadowed forest, for I had lost the path that does not stray.” “Now is the winter of our discontent Made glorious summer by this sun of York; And all the clouds that lour'd upon our house In the deep bosom of the ocean buried.” “It was a pleasure to burn.” “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.” “If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you'll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they had me, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don't feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth.”

INTRODUCTION SOURCES Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone A Tale of Two Cities Twilight Divergent Moby Dick Dante’s Inferno Richard III Fahrenheit 451 Pride and Prejudice The Catcher in the Rye

JOURNAL ENTRY 6 Focus: First Impressions & Introductions Think about an experience you had where someone made a memorable first impression on you. What was so memorable about the experience? How did it shape your future interactions with this person? Was your initial impression of this person accurate or did it greatly change over time? If possible, think about a memorable introduction you have read in an essay, book, or other form of writing (or even a movie or TV show). What was so memorable about the introduction? What kind of strategy did it use to grab reader attention? How did this memorable introduction affect your experience with the rest of the text?

SERIAL POSITION EFFECT Psychology term coined by Hermann Ebbinghaus Refers to the human tendency to remember the first and last items in a series best and the middle items the worst Primacy effect: first items are the most effectively stored in the long term memory because they have the greatest amount of processing devoted to them Recency effect: final items are still present in working memory because of being so recently reviewed What implications does this have for us in a composition class?

UNIVERSAL INTRODUCTION STRATEGIES General to specific Eye-catching data Ask reader to imagine a situation In media res Foreshadowing Rhetorical Appeals: Ethos Pathos Logos How do the rhetorical appeals fit with the above introduction strategies?

EXPLORATORY NARRATIVE INTRODUCTIONS Engage readers This is the easiest and most effective place to grab your readers’ attention in the whole essay The first few sentences are the most important for this Introduce the arguable issue you will be examining You should, at least somewhat, explain the opposing viewpoints that make this issue controversial Explain your own view on the issue You should include personal experiences that may have affected this view Introduce a problematic or significant research question that will guide the rest of the essay Note: it is common for exploratory narrative introductions to be more than one paragraph and slightly longer than the introductions from other forms of college writing.

GROUP ACTIVITY 1: INTRO ANALYSIS In your unit 1 groups Select two example essays from the class website. These should be different from the sample exploratory narrative you read last week Read the introductory paragraphs (stop at the first source information) and answer the following questions for both: 1.What is the topic the student is addressing? What research question do they ask about it? 2.What kind of strategy does the student make use of in the introduction? Does it sufficiently engage readers? 3.What rhetorical appeal(s) do you think are most utilized in the introduction? 4.Are the personal experiences or past of the writer presented here? How did they shape the writer’s viewpoint? 5.What is the writer’s research question? Is it clear and easy to identify? Does it fit the criteria for an exploratory narrative thesis questions that we discussed last class?

INTRODUCTIONS: FINAL WORD The most important takeaway from this lesson: Introductions are one of the most important elements of your writing! This is not a section to simply ‘slap on’ at the last minute Readers are most likely to remember information from your introduction and conclusion. If you do not grab reader attention by the end of the introduction, there is a chance you will never fully grab it by the end of the essay.

GROUP ACTIVITY 2: INTRO BRAINSTORM In your unit 1 groups 1.For each student, brainstorm at least two possible introduction strategies that could be used for the student’s exploratory narrative 2.Identify which rhetorical appeal would best fit for each of these introduction strategies

HOMEWORK Read A&B p Journal Entry 7: Exploratory Narrative Introduction Based on our discussions in class today, begin construction the introduction to your exploratory narrative in your journal Make sure to include the necessary elements we discussed in class, including: an explanation of the issue, your research question, how your personal view on the issue, and some kind of strategy for grabbing reader attention Note: This journal entry may be slightly longer than others words at least