1 / 17

SOAPSTone

SOAPSTone. Learning Targets. I can define and identify speaker, occasion, audience, purpose, subject, and tone in the context of text analysis. I can analyze texts to better understand the author ’ s message and intention.

thornburg
Download Presentation

SOAPSTone

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SOAPSTone

  2. Learning Targets • I can define and identify speaker, occasion, audience, purpose, subject, and tone in the context of text analysis. • I can analyze texts to better understand the author’s message and intention. • I can evaluate the effectiveness of a piece of writing (or speech) based on the speaker, occasion, audience, purpose, subject, and tone.

  3. SOAPSTone • Speaker • Occasion • Audience • Purpose • Subject • Tone

  4. S Who is the Speaker? It is not enough simply to name the speaker. What assumptions can you make about the speaker based upon the text (e.g., age, gender, class, occupation, emotional state)? What does the speaker believe and what evidence from the text do you have to support this? O A P S T o n e

  5. S What is the Occasion? What is important to understand about the historical context based? How does the speaker frame the occasion? Occasion is not simply identifying the time and place. Consider the larger occasion or context: the environment of ideas, attitudes, and emotions surrounding an issue. Then examine the immediate occasion that may have inspired this specific response. O A P S T o n e

  6. S Who is the Audience? To whom is this speech directed (both implicitly and explicitly)? It is not enough to say:“Anyone who hears it.” What is the relationship between the speaker and the audience? Where does the speech directly reference the audience? To what effect? What assumptions can you make about the intended audience and their reactions based upon the speech? O A P S T o n e

  7. S What is the Purpose? What is its intended effect of the speech on the audience (emotional)? What change does the author want to see as a result (action)? Is the author’s aim to entertain, to inform, to persuade, to critique, to complain, to explain, to describe, or to reflect? Are there multiple purposes? O A P S T o n e

  8. S What is the Subject? The subject is different from the purpose. The subjects of texts are frequently abstract: the right to die, racism, poverty, conformity, freedom etc. Look for the deeper meaning when determining the subject of a speech. Another way to think of this is write a one-word “meaning” for the speech and then build a statement around it. O A P S T o n e

  9. Examples of Subject Statements • One-word topic: Love • Love is the most important, but sometimes the most painful emotion. • One-word topic: Knowledge • Knowledge means nothing without action based upon what one has learned.

  10. Abstractions • Friendship • Brilliance • Truth • Charity • Justice • Pride • Courage • Deceit • Love • Anger • Hate • Peace • Loyalty • Integrity • Trust • Compassion • Bravery • Misery • Childhood • Knowledge • Patriotism • Honesty

  11. S What is the Tone? Tone is the attitude of the speaker towards his subject. What emotional sense do you take from the piece? Does it stay consistent throughout, or do the speaker’s feelings shift? Consider how word choice, sentence structure, and imagery choices made by the speaker might point to the tone. O A P S T o n e

  12. Talking About Tone • aggravated • ambiguous • amused • angry • apathetic • apologetic • appreciative • apprehensive • arrogant • dramatic • ecstatic • effusive • elated • elegiac • factual • fanciful • flippant • foreboding • moralistic • mournful • nostalgic • objective • outraged • passionate • patronizing • pedantic • perplexed

  13. Activity (finish for HW): • Read “Living like Weasels.” While reading, annotate for the three rhetorical appeals and the elements of SOAPSTone. • Complete the SOAPSTone chart together • Column One: “Analysis”(GO BEYOND THE OBVIOUS!) • “The tone is humorous but then shifts to…” • Column Two: Textual Support • “I just flew in, and boy are my arms tired, but in all seriousness, let’s talk about airplane safety.” (1)

  14. Activity (15 minutes): • Get out your completed SOAPSTone chart for “Living like Weasels.” • With your group, discuss your analysis and textual evidence for each component of SOAPSTone, editing and strengthening your chart as you discuss. • Then, as a group, come to a consensus for each component and create a master SOAPSTone chart for your group on butcher paper.

  15. Big Paper Discussion • Silently, read the group’s chart. Comment on their chart, considering the following questions: • Where do you agree with their analysis? Where do you disagree? Why? • What new insights do you gain about the text based upon the group’s analysis?

  16. Big Paper Discussion • Once you return to your chart, you may begin talking within your group to discuss the comments that were made by your classmates. • Circle comments that stand out to you

  17. Reflection: How did your understanding of the text change and grow deeper after interacting with the text and collaborative discussion?

More Related