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Drill 4/29

Drill 4/29. Your essay is DONE! HOORAY! How do you feel about your work, now that the project is completed? What do you think are the main aspects of transforming your essay into a persuasive speech? What work needs to be done? What are the components of a successful persuasive speech?.

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Drill 4/29

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  1. Drill 4/29 • Your essay is DONE! HOORAY! How do you feel about your work, now that the project is completed? • What do you think are the main aspects of transforming your essay into a persuasive speech? What work needs to be done? • What are the components of a successful persuasive speech?

  2. Tuesday, April 29th Agenda: Learn about the rhetorical strategies “logos,” “pathos,” and “ethos.” Watch Example Speech Mini-Lesson on Speech Requirements Complete Handout Homework: Practice Your Speech! Speeches Begin on Friday, May 2nd.

  3. LOGOS • Logos • An appeal to logic and reason • Example: • School uniforms should be required because it would then be easier for staff to recognize intruders.

  4. LOGOS Strategies • Evidence • Examples and illustrations • Facts, statistics • Precedents, laws • Organization • Process • Comparison/contrast • Division/classification • Cause/effect • Definition, description

  5. PATHOS • Pathos • An appeal to emotional reaction. • Example: • School uniforms should be required because it alleviates students’ fear of looking different and being picked on because of their clothes. • Suzy Jo McGuillicutty retells the story of when she was made fun of and beaten up because she wore the same blouse two days in a row. Sobbing, she conjures up painful memories of not fitting in.

  6. PATHOS • Strategies • Inspiring feeling/empathy/sympathy • Anger, pride, guilt, love, shame, hope, etc. • Awareness of opposition • Awareness of the audience's cultural and emotional background • Race, age, sex, physical characteristics, habits • Economic or educational level • Religious or political affiliation • Ethnicity, country of birth, citizenship, location • Awareness of audience concerns • Needs, values, beliefs of groups audience belongs to all.

  7. ETHOS • Ethos • An appeal based on your own credibility. • Example: • Based on research explained in the Winter 2004 issue of Educational Leadership, seventy-four percent of the schools who attempted a uniform policy could not claim success with any certainty since other confounding variables such as higher security and a peer mediation program could just have easily have been the cause of decreased school violence. • In my own observations as a student teacher at Waldo Middle School in Salem, Oregon, I discovered that on “uniform days,” behavior referrals decreased to nearly none, whereas on “dress free days,” referrals spiked to as much as ten times as many.

  8. ETHOS • Strategies • Credibility (common sense) • Familiarity with subject • Awareness of broad perspective • Character (virtue) • Respect others' values • Value welfare of others • Show integrity, trustworthiness, open-mindedness • Confidence (good will) • Show self-understanding • Understand reader needs • Treat reader as equal

  9. Example Speech

  10. Requirements for Speech Note Cards: 6 note cards allowed for the outline + 3 note cards allowed for 3 different quotes Introduction with • Hook • Background info or context • Thesis statement “Body” of your presentation: follow handout. Remember to use RR: • If/then • rhetorical question • answer question • provide solution Conclusion: • Advanced Transition Word/Phrase and restate thesis in new words • Discuss general problems with your topic and your solution • End with a Call to Action that clearly communicates what the audience can do to help

  11. Learning Targets • I can thoughtfully select my three most powerful quotes to use in my speech. • I can organize the content of the persuasive essay into an outline for an effective speech.

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