Today we will discuss MLA format and give you time to research your topics. Topics are due tomorrow.
Monday, February 28, 2022
Monday
Friday, February 25, 2022
Thursday, February 24, 2022
Thursday
We are going to continue to take notes on persuasion, but make sure you know:
1) Logos
2) Ethos
3) Pathos
and types of persuasive elements needed in an essays
1) Personal Connection
2) Expect Testimony
3) Stats, Facts, quality of reasoning
4) Counter argument
5) Audience self-interest (Harms or Benefits of solution)
6) New topic or radical twist on an old topic
Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Oration/Persuation
Oratory
Today we are going to move onto Oration/Research Unit. You will be required to write a 3-5 page
original essay and deliver it to class. We will be taking notes today.
Be Ready.
Anchor Text(s)/Additional Instructional
Resources:
“Doing Nothing is Something” by Anna Quindlen – in textbook page
638
Political Ads – “Daisy” and “America’s Back” – in textbook page
738
“Abolishing the Penny Makes Good Sense” by Alan S. Blinder – in
textbook by 646
“A Modest Proposal” by Jonathan Swift
“Writing Workshop: Argument: Persuasive Essay” – page 742
Unit
Learning goal: Students will be able to research, write and perform an
original persuasive essay that takes a side on an issue and successfully argues
for that side.
Scale/Rubric
relating to learning goal:
4 – The student can write and perform an original
persuasive speech that that takes a side on an issue and successfully argues
for that side using all six elements of persuasion. The writing and performance are both
exemplarily effective.
3 – The student is able to write an original and perform
an original persuasive essay that takes a side on an issue and successfully
argues for that side.
2 – With some direction/help from the teacher the student
is able to write and perform an original persuasive essay that takes a side on
an issue and/or successfully argues for that side.
1 – Even with help
from the teacher the student is unable to write and/or perform an original
persuasive essay that takes a side on an issue and successfully argues for that
side.
Objectives (smaller chunks of overall goal) and suggested time periods
OBJECTIVES: By the end of this unit students will be able to
1) Define the following terms: Logos, Ethos,
Pathos, Thesis Statement, Order of Development, Conclusion, Transition,
Audience, Hook, Purpose, Evidence
2) List the six traits of writing and the six
steps in the writing process.
3) Properly outline the constructive for a
debate and rebut opponents points/arguments
4) Participate in Spar and Forum debate
5) Watch a national debate and evaluate and
explain who won by keeping a flow chart of arguments and rebuttals
6) Choose a topic about a controversial issues
and take one side of argument
7) List the Do’s and Don’ts of persuasive
argument
8) Write a clear and precise thesis statement
with an order of development
9) Properly cite sources both in-text and on a
works cited page
10) Find evidence from a variety of different
sources including Print Sources, Internet Sources, Media Sources, and Personal
Sources
11) Use the Internet to properly to conduct
research
12) Create at least 10 Bibliography citations
and 10 research entries
13) Use research notes to cite passages from
sources
14) Use evidence to back up your position
15) Use your order of development as an
organizational tool
16) Use transitions to connect points of
argument
17) Use Standard Edited American English
18) Use Proper College Composition Format
19) Use the six steps of the writing process to
draft and revise a paper
20) Write three drafts of a persuasive essay
using at least three sources of evidence
21) Present the final draft of your essay as an
oration to class
ASSIGNMENTS: Participate in a Debate
Tournament, Watch a National High School Debate and keep a flow chart, create
10 MLA citations and source entries, write a persuasive speech and deliver it as
an oration.
|
|
4
|
3
|
2
|
Not Evident
|
|
Thesis Statement, Ideas,
Defining your argument
|
Ideas are fresh and
original. Thesis is narrow and manageable.
Order of development clear and precise and helps development one clear main
idea. Hook and thesis connect. Clear important details for support
|
Ideas are clear but might
be overused. Topic/ Thesis is fairly
board. Order of develop may ramble and
may not back up thesis. Hook is present
but may not connect with thesis.
Support is attempted but not quite fulfilled with specifics.
|
Paper lacks a central idea
or purpose. Ideas are not developed or
seem to go in several directions.
Information is limited or unclear.
Details are missing.
|
Not Evident
|
|
Organization
|
Original title.
Transitions connect main
ideas. Effective opening and ending.
Easy to follow. Important ideas
stand out. Clear beginning, middle and
end. Details fit where placed.
|
Appropriate title. Transitions connect sentence to sentence
but not necessary idea to idea. Good
beginning. Attempted ending. Logical sequencing. Key ideas are beginning to surface. Readable.
|
Paper is hard to follow
because transitions are weak or absent.
There is no clear beginning or ending.
Ideas may not fit together or ramble.
Paragraph structure might not be evident.
|
Not Evident
|
|
Voice
|
Point of view is evident
Clear sense of audience
Enthusiastic about
topic. Says more than is
expected. Words elicit both ideas and
emotions. Work is engaging and
persuades
|
Personal treatment of
standard topic. Perspective becomes
evident. Some sense of audience. Conveys ideas to reader. The writer likes the topic, but is not
passionate about it. Writing persuades
in some places
|
Paper is lifeless,
mechanic, stilted. Predictable
treatment of topic. Energy
lacking. Audience could be anyone. Writer is indifferent to the topic. Does not persuade at all.
|
Not evident
|
|
Word Choice
|
Precise, fresh, original
words. Vivid images. Avoids repetitions, clichés, and
vagueness. Use of figurative language. Everyday words are used well.
|
Uses favorite words
correctly. Experiments with new
words. Attempts to use descriptive
words to create images.
|
Ordinary and recognizable
words. Language is generic or
cliché. Uses repetitions or relies on
slang. Overuse of “to be” verbs.
|
Not Evident
|
|
Sentence Fluency
|
Consistent use of sentence
variety. Sentence structure is correct
and creative. Varied beginnings,
varied structures, and varied lengths.
Natural flow and rhythm.
Writing is not wordy. Rhetorical strategies such as parallelism used effectively.
|
Sentences are usually
correct, but some may not flow smoothly.
Simple and compound sentences are present. Varied beginning. Sections have rhythm and flow. Writing could be cut to avoid wordiness.
Rhetorical strategies such as parallelism attempted.
|
Sentences are choppy,
incomplete, rambling or awkward.
Meanings are not always clear.
Words are strung together.
Sentences could be extremely wordy.
|
Not Evident
|
|
Mechanics
|
There may be occasional
errors in mechanics (spelling, fragments, run-ons, punctuation,
capitalization, usage, etc.). However,
it is hard to find errors.
|
Errors in writing mechanics
are noticeable but do not impair readability.
|
Numerous errors in usage,
grammar, spelling, capitalization, and/or punctuation distract reader and
impair readability.
|
Not Evident
|
|
Uses of Persuasive
Tools/Evidence
Expert Testimony
Personal Connection
Statistics, Facts, and
Logic
Counter Argument (Counter
claims)
Audience Self-Interest
|
Essay
cites at least two experts in a field related to the topic. Evidence is relevant to thesis. Analysis makes clear how the evidence
connects to the thesis. (Ethos and
Logos)
Student
uses personal experience to connect to the topic (ethos). Experience is relevant and analyzed in
relation to the topic.
Student uses statistics,
facts, and logical argumentation in essay.
The evidence is relevant to the thesis. Analysis makes clear how the evidence
connects and defends the thesis. (Logos)
Student has at least two
counter arguments that refutes or contends an argument of the opposition, or
concedes a point. The counterarguments
are relevant, analyzed and connect evidence with thesis.
(Logos and Ethos)
Student uses HARMS and
BENEFITS of adopting his/her position to influence audience self-interest
(Pathos). The harms/benefits are
relevant and reinforce the thesis.
|
Essay cites at least two
experts. Evidence is relevant to
thesis. The analysis makes some
connections between evidence and thesis.
Student
uses personal experience relevant to the topic. Experience offers some insight into the
topic and position of the writer.
Student uses statistics
and/or facts and/or logical argumentation in the essay. The evidence is relevant to the
thesis. The analysis makes some
connections between evidence and thesis.
Student has at least one
counter argument that refutes or concedes an argument of the opposition. The counterargument is relevant, and
analyze.
Student uses HARMS or
BENEFITS of adopting his/her or her position to influence audience
self-interest. The harm or benefit is
relevant and might connect to the thesis.
|
Essay cites at least one
expert. Evidence might not be relevant
to thesis. No analysis or no
connection made between evidence and thesis
Student
attempts to use personal connection.
Connection may not be relevant to the topic.
Student attempts to use
statistics and/or facts. Evidence may
not be relevant to thesis or the analysis is confusing or oversimplified.
Student attempts a counter
argument. The counter argument might
not be relevant to the thesis or the analysis might be confusing or
oversimplified.
Student attempts to use
HARMS or BENEFITS to influence audience.
The harm or benefit might not be relevant or the analysis might be
confusing or oversimplified.
.
|
Not Evident
Not Evident
Not Evident
Not Evident
Not Evident
|
|
References and Sources
|
More
than five sources. All sources of
information are noted in correct in-text citation (MLA format) and correct
Works Cited page.
|
Three
to five sources. Some sources of information are noted incorrectly or not in
MLA format. Minor problems with Works
Cited page.
|
Less than three
sources. Most information noted
incorrectly. MLA format completely
missing. Many problems with Works
Cited page.
|
Not Evident
|
Intro:
*Immediately engage reader (attention getter)
·
get the reader “in the
ballpark”
*Establish
context
(topic of essay)
·
usually 2-3 sentences narrowing
down to the point of the paper
·
cite your source with title and
author (if using one source)
*Strong &
complete thesis statement
Body:
*Begin paragraphs with a clear, concise topic
sentence
·
*Use
concrete details (CD)
·
these include facts or quotes
·
cite sources when necessary
(simplified: such as author’s last name & pg #)
·
*Create insightful
commentary to support concrete details (2-3
comments per CD)
·
shoot for at least 2 CD per
paragraph (+ commentary)
Conclusion:
*Transition into summary of key points
*Transition into summary of key points
*Restate thesis (say it another way!)
*Refer
back to the attention getter and tie things up
*Answer “So what?”
·
Leave reader feeling persuaded or
at least challenged
·
This personal comment can include
a universal observation
(a prediction), a call to action (a recommendation) or a scare
(a veiled threat)
(a prediction), a call to action (a recommendation) or a scare
(a veiled threat)
Suggested sentence
starter for commentary:
“This shows that…” (eventually teach kids
to eliminate it)
“This proves that…”
“This demonstrates that…”
Suggested sentence
starters for conclusion:
“We need to…”
“It’s our
responsibility to …”
“It’s important
to…”
“In order to______,
we must…”
“It would be to our
benefit to…”
Encourage:
Incorporate transitions
Use high-level vocab
Incorporate transitions
Use high-level vocab
Vary sentence patterns
Create a strong “voice”
Create a strong “voice”
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
Monday
Today you will have time to work on your essays. These will be due on Friday, but tomorrow I will probably be starting to get you ready for PERSUASIVE ESSAYS and DEBATES.
Thursday, February 17, 2022
Friday
Continue to work on essays. You can email me what you have so far and I will look at it on Sunday and give you feedback.
Thursday
You
need to look at the following list of questions/statements and choose
one to develop into a thesis statement and develop an essay around. The
learning goal and rubric are below. Essays will be due on 2/25.
QUESTIONS TO DEVELOP THESIS
STATEMENTS ABOUT AND ANSWER
- Polonius is sometimes played as a senile old fool, sometimes as a shrewd and worldly old man. Which interpretation do you agree with and why?
- Pick one character who could, at some point, have changed the whole chain of events. Discuss.
- Analyze the three appearances of the ghost seen in the play. Where did he appear; to whom did he appear? How does the third appearance differ from the first two? What is the significance of this?
- Discuss the reasons for Hamlet’s apparent delay in seeking revenge for his father. What is your opinion regarding his procrastination?
- Compare and contrast Hamlet, Laertes, and Fortinbras as avengers.
- What is Hamlet’s attitude towards life and people? How does it affect his actions?
- Apply the following quote to Hamlet: “A man who wishes to make a profession of goodness in everything must necessarily come to grief among so many who are not good. Therefore, it is necessary for a prince, who wishes to maintain himself, to learn how to not to be good, and to use this knowledge and not use it, according to the necessity of the case.” -- THE PRINCE, Machiavelli
- Examine the reoccurring pun on sun and son. How does this symbol work in the overall meaning of the play.
- Was Ophelia pregnant with Hamlet’s child?
- Did Hamlet slip into madness?
- It is Hamlet who causes the downfall of Denmark.
- What is the meaning of the pirates?
- Is Hamlet Jesus Christ? How is Horatio either John the Baptist or an apostle.
- Why or how is Denmark the Garden of Eden?
- Gertrude knows about the murder?
- The meaning of prostitution in Hamlet?
- Can Hamlet be compared to our current society? If so, how?
Students will demonstrate
an understanding of Hamlet by choosing a prompt from below, developing a
thesis statement out of it, and answering the thesis statement by analyzing and
using direct evidence from the text.
Analytical Essay
Rubric
4
|
3
|
2
|
1
|
|
Thesis, opening
paragraph.
|
Student takes a
clear position on the prompt/topic.
Thesis Statement is defensible.
Hook and thesis statement link.
Order of development is present and sets up how the thesis will be
investigated. Thesis connects prompt
to the text as a whole.
|
Student has a clear
and defensible thesis statement.
Thesis connects
prompt to the text as a whole.
Essay contains a
hook.
|
Thesis statement is
attempted,
But – maybe not be
defendable.
May not be clear. May be wordy.
May not connect to
the text as a whole.
|
There is no
recognizable thesis statement.
Or there may be
multiple thesis statements.
|
Use of Evidence
|
Evidence is
introduced and relevant to the thesis and analysis is thorough makes clear
how the evidence connects to and defends the thesis. Evidence is properly cited. (3-4 pieces of
evidence per point)
|
Evidence is
introduced and relevant to the thesis.
The analysis makes connection between evidence and thesis, but the
quality and/or quantity is inconsistent.
Evidence is cited.
(2 pieces of
evidence per point)
|
Evidence is
relevant to the thesis and there is some analysis attempted, but the analysis
may be taken out of context, misinterpreted, or oversimplified.
(2 pieces of
evidence per point)
|
Evidence is
attempted, but may not defend thesis or there is no connection made between
evidence and the thesis.
No direct
quotation, or citations.
|
Sophistication of
Writing
|
Use of prose style
that is especially vivid. Student uses
rhetorical strategies such as parallel structure. Varied syntax. High level vocabulary. Language consistent for an academic essay.
|
Student uses varied
syntax. Some high level vocabulary
present. Prose style is engaging. Language consistent for an academic essay.
|
Student attempts
varied syntax. Vocabulary might be
simplistic or repetitious. Prose style
is sometimes engaging but might be repetitious of ideas. Language may not be consistent for an
academic essay
|
Wordy,
repetitious. Vocabulary might be
repetitious or the use of “to be” verbs may be overused. Not engaging.
|
Grammar
|
No Errors
|
1-3 errors that do
not distract from reading.
|
More than 3 errors,
or the errors present distract from reading.
|
Many errors. Errors seriously distract from the reading of
the text.
|
Length
|
More than 4 pages
|
3-4 pages
|
Less than 3 pages
|
Less than 1 page
|
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