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The Apple Watch What are potential repercussions of the following capability of the new The Apple Watch What are potential repercussions of the following capability of the new

The Apple Watch What are potential repercussions of the following capability of the new - PowerPoint Presentation

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The Apple Watch What are potential repercussions of the following capability of the new - PPT Presentation

Todays o bjective The student will be able to craft a rhetorical précis after annotating a rhetorical analysis prompt I What do each of the following characters embody Character Name ID: 707560

analysis rhetorical slaves banneker rhetorical analysis banneker slaves jefferson essay

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Slide1

The Apple Watch

What are potential repercussions of the following capability of the new Apple Watch?Today’s objective: The student will be able to craft a rhetorical précis after annotating a rhetorical analysis prompt. Slide2

I. What do each of the following characters embody?

Character

Name?

Adj./ What do

they embody? Attitude toward other character/important plot pointsRev. WilsonXGovernorXChillingworth HibbinsXPearlHesterXDimmesdaleX

II. Symbols III. Scaffold Scenes

Today’s

objective:

The student will be able to craft a rhetorical précis after annotating a rhetorical analysis prompt.

Please create the following chart on a piece of paper:Slide3

AP Rhetorical Analysis

Objective: The student will be able to craft a rhetorical précis after annotating a rhetorical analysis prompt. Slide4

Schedule

Warm-up (10 minutes)Finish analyzing essays for Welty (10)Take précis notes for Welty (10)BAT and annotate Banneker essay (15)Write rhetorical précis for Banneker (20)Talk about parts of a strong essay (10)Look at first essay (10)Label parts of the essay (5)Read the rest of the essays and discuss (20)Slide5

Précis Formula

1) Name of author, type of document, (date) “Title” argues (a description of the author’s major purpose).2) A couple of rhetorical terms and, in brief, how they function to convey meaning.3) Describe the organization, or structure of the speech, and explain why it is particularly effective for this audience

4) Writing with (two tone words), author’s name appeals to (a description of the two audiences and why the message appeals to them).Slide6

Rhetorical Précis example for Eudora Welty’s “One Writer’s Beginnings”

1) In Eudora Welty’s autobiographical essay “One Writer’s Beginnings”(1984), she argues that her love for writing began with her love of reading and that two powerful female role models influenced her to become a voracious reader. 2) Using figurative language, repetition, and powerful diction, Welty crafts a vivid description of the formative influences that inspired her to create her own world of words. 3) By juxtaposing the severe Mrs. Calloway and her own mother, Welty shows that inspiration can take both a positive and negative form.

4) Writing with a reflective nostalgia,

Welty appeals to her public of aspiring writers and also to hopeful students of literature everywhere.Slide7

2010 AP Rhetorical Analysis PromptSlide8

First draft!

(I am incredibly grateful for YOU and your example!)Slide9

Quick revision:Slide10

Final draft:

t

nSlide11

Another Banneker Précis

1)Benjamin Banneker’s persuasive letter (1791) asserts that slavery is an injustice that Thomas Jefferson should work to eradicate. 2) Banneker uses emotional diction and structured metaphors which juxtapose the condition of the slaves with the colonial opposition to a

“state

of

servitude” under England. 3) Banneker’s command of parallelism and Biblical allusion further force Jefferson to visualize the injustice of slavery and persuade the secretary that he should free his slaves. 4) Writing with reverence, Banneker’s eloquent appeal not only reminds Jefferson of God’s watchful eyes but serves in contemporary times to remind Americans of our own shameful past. Slide12

Ps. A structural metaphor is…

Definition 

A structural metaphor is a 

conventional metaphor

 in which one concept is understood and expressed in terms of another structured, sharply defined concept.  Here are some examples of the argument-as-war structural metaphor:Your claims are indefensible.He attacked every weak point in my argument.His criticisms were right on target.I demolished his argument.Slide13

Let’s now write an essay!

Here is one possible formula: Introduction-Thesis is at the end of the paragraph-The rhetorical précis will be introduced block-dayBody Paragraphs 1-3 (organized by strategy in chronological order)

-Topic sentence

-Context

-Concrete detail (integrated quote)-Commentary (1:3 ratio)-Context-Concrete detail (integrated quote) -Commentary (1:3 ratio)-Conclusion/transition Conclusion Slide14

Chronological Order

I. Intro paragraph: You may use our précis or just start with an extended observation followed by a thesis.II. Body paragraph:

Analysis

of all devices and appeals in the first 1/3 of the

essayIII. Body paragraph: Analysis of all devices and appeals in the middle of the essayIV. Body paragraph: A discussion of the end of the essay including an analysis of the conclusion.V. Conclusion: Restate your thesis (OR bring your last paragraph to the end of the essay to make a concluding statement)Slide15

2013’s AP graders advice for the Rhetorical Analysis Prompt

The analysis question, provides an opportunity for students to demonstrate their practical understanding of rhetorical analysis. Like the synthesis question, the analysis question requires students to integrate reading and writing skills. Rhetorical reading entails comprehending both the meaning and

purpose

of an author’s

argument and its intended audience(s), and students are asked to demonstrate rhetorical comprehension of a text by explaining how the author’s rhetorical decisions promote or hinder successful accomplishment of the purpose. In short, rhetorical analysis means explaining not only what writers are saying but also why and how they are saying it.Slide16

Rhetorical Analysis =

How, Why, So What

HOW?

What

techniques doe the writer choose to present the material?WHY ?Are the choices effective and appropriate for the intended audience?SO WHAT? What is accomplished or created?SpeakerPurpose (so what?)Audience (why?)Rhetorical devices/

strategies/E,P, and L (how?)Slide17

In his letter to Thomas Jefferson (1791), Benjamin Banneker argues that slavery is morally wrong and that America needs to change this vile tradition. He uses juxtaposition to compare free men to slaves and uses allusion to the Bible and Americans’ religion to appeal to Jefferson’s conscience, while also intelligently using parallel syntax and

polysyndeton to highlight free mens’ and slaves similar attitudes toward freedom. With desperation and passion, Banneker stresses that slavery should be abolished in hopes that whites and blacks could all be free, both in 1791 and in the future.Slide18

Banneker starts off his essay “entreating” Jefferson to reflect on America’s struggle for independence from the “arms and tyranny of the British Crown.” Benjamin logically asserts that if the colonists had a right to freedom, then slaves should also have the same right. He uses the phrase, “State of Servitude” to compare the colonists to slaves, purposefully capitalizing the words in order to emphasize this connection. Benjamin also alludes to “Heaven” because he wants Jefferson to realize that the slaves truly are deserving of “freedom and tranquility” which was “mercifully received” from Heaven. Slaves were taught the grace of God even back in 1791, and Banneker utilizes this to prove that slaves were allowed to receive the “blessing of Heaven” just like Americans were.Slide19

Banneker very astutely remarks that Jefferson understands the “injustice of the state of slavery”, continuing with his assertion that the colonists could understand the right and need for freedom. However, he now accuses Jefferson of his scandalous decree by alluding to the Declaration itself, where Jefferson himself wrote that, “all men are created equal”. This allusion very effectively points to the mistaken mindset of the colonists who refuse to acknowledge slaves’ right for freedom. Banneker impressively uses Jefferson’s own knowledge and feelings against slavery, which establishes ethos, or his credibility, not through his own knowledge, but through Jefferson’s. This witty use of ethos only strengthens Banneker’s argument because it effectively convinces all readers, including Jefferson, that slavery is logically wrong.Slide20

In addition, Banneker asserts that slavery is morally wrong through

polysyndeton combined with strong adjectives with the purpose of appealing to all readers’ consciences. Banneker writes a long-winded sentence explaining the colonists’ realization of their rights for freedom and confirming their belief in God’s “equal and impartial distribution” of these precious rights. Since most people value freedom, it is natural to assume the readers of Banneker’s letter also value these rights of “liberty and free possession.” Therefore, Banneker’s long statement about mankind’s natural longing for freedom is extremely effective when it is juxtaposed, after a semi-colon, with his clear description of the agony, “under groaning captivity and cruel oppression” the colonists had inflicted upon the slaves. This statement by Banneker strongly convicts the reader, Jefferson especially and other colonists of the time period, the slaves’ light to light, face to face with the reader’s morals and sense of sympathy for the slaves. Banneker in the next paragraph again appeals to the reader’s “kindness and benevolence” when he asks the readers to “put [their] souls in [the slaves’] stead” both alluding to the Bible and evoking more sympathy for the slaves’ condition.Slide21

Banneker’s astute essay to Mr. Jefferson was extremely effective at depicting the abject conditions of the slaves while confronting the colonists’ mindset on slavery at the same time it appeals to the minds of future readers to understand past conditions and influence future events because of Banneker’s influential words. Slide22

“Wordles”