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  • rhetoric
Beyond facts and statistics: Restoring order to how we understand logos in writing
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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This resource aims to generate ideas and possibilities about how to advance student understanding of logic in writing beyond the notion that logic is always a collection of data points or a reference to facts. Instead of reducing logic to numbers and statements, this source hopes to introduce students and teachers to the existential questions that are always involved in the logical appeals of a text: how do we know what we know and why does it matter?

Subject:
English
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Homework/Assignment
Author:
Bryan Harvey
Date Added:
01/08/2020
Certainty & Doubt in the writings of Jonathan Edwards and Langston Hughes
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CC BY-NC-SA
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The activities here work on analysis and synthesis skills. They take canonized text that are often taught at different times in the school year due to their placement in U.S. and world history and ask students to pair them together. A variety of activities and assessments are described or suggested throughout this resource to help students explore the boundaries surrounding certainty and doubt and lived experience.

Subject:
English
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Homework/Assignment
Author:
Bryan Harvey
Date Added:
01/08/2020
Farewell to Manzanar by James D. Houston and Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston
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CC BY-NC
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This lesson reimagines an existing instructional resource, "The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck" created by Franky Abbott, Digital Public Library of America.

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In this remix, "The Grapes of Wrath" and the related primary source documents are exchanged for "Farewell to Manzanar" and related primary sources accessed through secondary open-source databases.

Discussion questions ask students to consider the memoir in light of its historical context and students gain experience reading and evaluating visual sources including political cartoons and propaganda posters to understand how elements of rhetorical can shape and/or reflect cultural values.

Subject:
Communication and Multimodal Literacy
English
Non-fiction
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Case Study
Primary Source
Unit of Study
Date Added:
11/11/2019
Lots of things fall apart: A remix of Chinua Achebe's "New English" in Things Fall Apart
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CC BY-NC-SA
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This resource is a remix of the EDSITEment! resource found through this link. That lesson does a strong job of placing Chinua Achebe's watershed novel within a particular cultural context. This resource aims to provide teachers and students with choices for comparative literature projects. This resource does not include activities so much as a list of resources that might pair well with a novel that is often difficult for high school students to grasp. 

Subject:
English
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Author:
Bryan Harvey
Date Added:
12/21/2019
Oregon Writes Open Writing Text
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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This textbook guides students through rhetorical and assignment analysis, the writing process, researching, citing, rhetorical modes, and critical reading. Guided by Oregon's statewide college writing outcomes, this book collects previously published articles, essays, and chapters released under Creative Commons licenses into one free textbook available for online access or print-on-demand.

Subject:
English
Writing
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
OpenOregon
Author:
Jenn Kepka
Date Added:
01/01/2016
Rhetoric and Composition: A Guide for the College Writer
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CC BY-NC-SA
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Designed for use as a textbook in first-year college composition programs, written as a practical guide for students struggling to bring their writing up to the level expected of them by their professors and instructors.

Subject:
English
Material Type:
Visual Media
Provider:
Wikibooks
Date Added:
04/01/2019
Summative Extension Assessments Connected to "The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin" resource created by Samantha Gibson
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CC BY-NC
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This resource is intended as a Summative Extension activity to the resource created by Samantha Gibson entitled "The Fire Next Time." The original source contains a detailed lesson plan that incorporates primary source documents in order to compare and contrast leading figures of the Civil Rights movement. This extension activity is intended to provide a synthesis activity that asks students to consider and explore a modern-day example of social protest and evaluate various approaches to the same issue.
Optional extension activities include a collaborative persuasive presentation that requires research and rhetoric skills to be successful and/or an individual written research paper.

Subject:
English
Non-fiction
Reading
Research
Writing
Material Type:
Assessment
Date Added:
11/11/2019