Literacy & Rhetoric Goals: Students will
- Define terms related to Civil Literacy
- Define and identify differences between argument and persuasion
- Define a social issue as a rhetorical problem i.e., a problem that can beaddressed
- Identify a rhetorical audience i.e., social institutions and/or people who have power to change things
- Analyze a social problem in term of a rhetorical audience
- Analyze causes & consequences related to a social problem
- Analyze a social problem in terms of solutions: action, change in attitude, and/or understanding
- Identify and employ discourse conventions (i.e., ideas, genres & sentence style) of public documents (e.g., letters to the editor and creative non-fiction essays)
- Identify how genre and sentence style informs textual ethos in public documents
- Identify and employ elements of persuasive writing and speaking
- Work collaboratively with a group
Writing Goals: Students will...
- Define a social issue as a rhetorical problem
- State purpose and thesis
- Address audience effectively
- Given purpose and audience, effectively employ genre conventions of public documents
- Given purpose and audience, effectively employ classical persuasion strategies
- Given purpose and audience, effectively employ particular details as evidence
- Given purpose, audience and genre, organize their texts effectively in terms of the whole and in terms of individual paragraphs
- Given purpose, audience and genre, employ effective sentence style
- Construct an effective public ethos
- Effectively introduce and conclude texts
- Employ citation practices appropriate for public documents
Speaking Goals:
- Employ oral presentations (OPs) for inventio/revision of their final written projects
- Adapt final written project into a 5-minute summary for a listening audience
Suggested Readings:
- Thomas Jefferson, The Declaration of Independence (1776)
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions (1848)
- Frederick Douglass, The Meaning of the Fourth of July to the Negro (1858 )
- Ida B. Wells, The Law of Lynching (1900)
- Jackie Robinson, Letter to the President (1958)
- Clergymen's letter to Martin Luther King (1963)
- Martin Luther King, Letter from Birmingham Jail (1963)
- Lorna Dee Cervantes, Poem for the Young White Man Who Asked Me How I, An Intelligent, Well-Read Person Could Believe in the War Between the Races (1981)
- Amina Wadud, Gender, Culture and Religion: An Islamic Perspective (1990)
- David Cowles, The Price of Smoking (1999 My Turn)
- Carolyn Turk, A Woman Can Learn Anything a Man Can (2004 My Turn) Web resources:
- American Friends Service Committee: http:www.afsc.org
- Amnesty International: http://www.amnesty.org/
- Human Rights Watch: http://www.hrw.org/about/
Suggested Writings:
Short Writing 1: Pick one social issue & tell about your involvement with it (1p)
Short Writing 2: Write letter to the editor on your issue (identify media outlet) (1p.)
Short Writing 3: Profile My Turn audience's values/beliefs about your topic (1?)
Paper 3: Write creative non-fiction essay for Newsweek's My Turn column (5 pp.)
Suggested Oral Presentations:
Presentation 1: Read SW #1 to small group
Presentation 2: Present SW #2 letter info to class (10 people, 2 minutes each)
Presentation 3: Present briefing of final paper to class (5 people, 5 minutes each)
Unit Grade: 25% of final course grade
The unit grade will be awarded to the final essay; however , short writings must be completed on due dates AND turned in with Portfolio Three; likewise, oral reports must be performed. Otherwise, students may lose 1/4 percentage point for each SW or oral report not completed on time or not included in the unit portfolio (cf. Course Policy Statement). |