English Instructional Plan – Analysis of Rhetorical Appeal
- Subject:
- Communication and Multimodal Literacy
- English
- Material Type:
- Lesson Plan
- Author:
- VDOE Project Team
- Date Added:
- 04/13/2022
English Instructional Plan – Analysis of Rhetorical Appeal
This lesson remixes an original lesson created by Susan Ketcham entitled "The Poetry of Maya Angelou." In this lesson, students expand on a classroom activity (discussion question number 4) from the original source lesson and will use that as a foundation for learning and preparing for their own oral recitation of a poem. In order to successfully complete this task, students will need to explore one poem for both literal and figurative meaning and then determine how that poem would sound if spoken aloud. This last step requires students to critically explore how oral techniques such as tone, pauses, shifts, etc. help develop meaning.
Now that students have researched their topic/social issue and created an effective formal written argument, it’s time for them to demonstrate their rhetorical skills by applying them to another genre! Students will:Select an appropriate platform for the product and use it to articulate and present an effective argumentArgue and defend original position in a succinct manner (brief but still comprehensive) Use appropriate tone and rhetorical devices/strategies for the chosen presentation mediumReflect on choicesClick this link to get a Raise Your Voice! Part II: Performance-Based Assessment Google Doc.
For the following project, students will be engaging in real-world topics research on a topic of their choice and producing an essay or proposal that argues their position on that topic. This is a persuasive paper, not an expository paper. They will need to take a position regarding the position they choose and support it using research.
Students will research and then compose a researched-based persuasive essay. Students will debate with opponents of their topic in front of their teacher and peers. ** This performance assessment was developed by a collaborative team of teachers and division staff from Middlesex, Poquoson, and West Point school divisions.
This resource provides Summative extension activity options for an existing resource entitled: A Raisin in the Sun by Lorrain Hansberry. Teachers work with the original resource first to guide their main unit-instruction: https://goopenva.org/courses/a-raisin-in-the-sun-by-lorraine-hansberry-2/view
Next, they can review the Summative extension options provided in this resource to produce creative sythensis activities designed to extend the depth of knowledge students will gain from this lesson.
This resource provides Summative extension activity options for an existing resource entitled: A Raisin in the Sun by Lorrain Hansberry. Teachers work with the original resource first to guide their main unit-instruction: https://goopenva.org/courses/a-raisin-in-the-sun-by-lorraine-hansberry-2/view
Next, they can review the Summative extension options provided in this resource to produce creative sythensis activities designed to extend the depth of knowledge students will gain from this lesson.
This resource presents an approach for reading memoirs with students that examines the role of truth in the genre and in the specific work(s) chosen. It gives suggestions for activities during the reading and focuses on a culminating activity in which students engage in research to investigate the facts behind the accounts the author(s) present in the memoir. Students learn about evaluating sources, locate a reliable source and discuss its credibility and impact on their understanding of the events,. Finally, they present their findings and analysis to the class.