8th grade Review Persuasive Techniques Reviewed

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
LOGICAL REASONING Study Unit 5 – eLearning RPK 214.
Advertisements

THINKING. Critical Thinking
1 Valid and Invalid arguments. 2 Definition of Argument Sequence of statements: Statement 1; Statement 2; Therefore, Statement 3. Statements 1 and 2 are.
Evaluating an Author’s Argument. © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education Chapter 11: Evaluating an Author's Argument 2 Author’s Argument An author’s argument.
Persuasive Text.
Foundational Studies. Definition  An essay is – a fairly brief analytic or interpretative literary piece of non-fiction that tries to assert a particular.
Propaganda and Persuasive Techniques. Propaganda Propaganda is used to influence people to believe, buy or do something.
True/False. False True Subject May Go Here True / False ? Type correct answer here. Type incorrect answer here.
Clarke, R. J (2001) L951-08: 1 Critical Issues in Information Systems BUSS 951 Seminar 8 Arguments.
Fallacious Reasoning vs. Logical Reasoning (Persuasive vs. Argumentative Writing)
Part 2 Module 3 Arguments and deductive reasoning Logic is a formal study of the process of reasoning, or using common sense. Deductive reasoning involves.
Part 3 – REFUTING OPPOSING ARGUMENTS.  Before you start writing an argumentative essay, I strongly suggest you to prepare an outline and first, write.
Chapter 11: Evaluating an Author’s Argument
1 Doing Statistics for Business Doing Statistics for Business Data, Inference, and Decision Making Chapter 8 Hypothesis Testing : An Introduction.
Vocabulary Notebook.
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt WORD S.
Persuasive Vocabulary
Persuasion Is All Around You! “Can You Hear Me Now?”
My Essay Terms Your Name.
  What is an argument?  What is persuasion?  What is the difference between the two? Bellringer.
True genius resides in the capacity for the evaluation of uncertain, hazardous, and conflicting information. - Winston Churchill.
PERSUASIVE TECHNIQUES BANDWAGON APPEAL Everyone is doing it! Taps into people’s desire to belong.
Visual Argumentation.
11 th grade American Literature F ALLACIES. W HAT IS A FALLACY ?  Logical Fallacies are ERRORS IN REASONING.  This differs from a factual error, which.
Claims & Counterclaims
Question of the Day!  We shared a lot of examples of illogical arguments!  But how do you make a LOGICAL argument? What does your argument need? What.
DEDUCTIVE REASONING MOVES FROM A GENERALIZATION THAT IS TRUE OR SELF-EVIDENT TO A MORE SPECIFIC CONCLUSION DEDUCTIVE REASONING.
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 1-b What is Philosophy? (Part 2) By David Kelsey.
Today’s Agenda  Discuss use of rhetorical devices in MLK’s “I Have a Dream”  Notes on and discuss: Flawed persuasive techniques Creating an extremely.
CHAPTER 9 THINKING CRITICALLY IN THIS CHAPTER YOU WILL LEARN: What it means to think critically, and why it is important What facts and opinions are, and.
Analyzing Persuasive Text
ARGUMENTS. WHAT IS AN ARGUMENT? An argument consist of two or more premises and one conclusion. A premise is a statement that supports the conclusion.
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 1-b What is Philosophy? (Part 2) By David Kelsey.
Claims and Counterclaims. A thesis is… What you believe and intend to prove in your essay Answers the prompt Includes the “why” Prompt: Does America need.
I believe YOUR VOICE MUST BE HEARD. Beliefs Writing Project English I DUE: Friday, Dec. 9, 2011.
Academic Vocabulary Unit 7 Cite: To give evidence for or justification of an argument or statement.
Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 1-b What is Philosophy? (Part 2) By David Kelsey.
Propaganda Techniques 7th grade Language Arts Pam Winarski/ Hilary Williams.
Claim 1 Smarter Balanced Sample Items Grade 7 - Target H Draw informal comparative inferences about two populations. Questions courtesy of the Smarter.
© 2009 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.1 Chapters1 & 2.
8 th grade English. Definition Rhetorical Devices – is an artful arrangement of words to achieve a particular emphasis and effect. It consists of two.
1 Lesson 7: Arguments SOCI Thinking Critically about Social Issues Spring 2012.
Persuasive and Argument. Aren’t they the same thing? Persuasive v. Argument Similarities 1.Author makes a claim 2.Purpose is to convince an audience to.
Adalina’s Whale Day 1.
Preparing your argument
Persuasive Techniques
Basic Vocabulary for Persuasive Texts
Debate: Claims.
Chapter 9 Persuasion.
Rhetorical Fallacies Faulty Arguments in Persuasive Texts:
Persuasive Techniques
Persuasion: All Around You!
Philosophy Logic Lesson 1.
Propositions & Arguments
How is persuasion used in a court room?
Academic Vocabulary Weeks 5-6 1st Nine Weeks.
Visual Argumentation.
Nonfiction vocabulary
Chapter 7: What is Argument?
Reading Street Comprehension Skills: Fact and Opinion
Introduction to Logic Lecture 1 What is Critical Reasoning?
Introduction to Ethics Lecture 1-b What is Philosophy? (Part 2)
PERSUASIVE TEXTS.
4.9 Critical Evaluation AICE THINKING SKILLS.
Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
Fact and Opinion.
If there is any case in which true premises lead to a false conclusion, the argument is invalid. Therefore this argument is INVALID.
If there is any case in which true premises lead to a false conclusion, the argument is invalid. Therefore this argument is INVALID.
Welcome back, Mavericks!
Presentation transcript:

8th grade Review Persuasive Techniques Reviewed Factual Claims – claim based on fact Opinions – statement of belief (value words) Common Place Assertions – a statement that most people believe to be true and correct

Caricature http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DxkgOpDtx7k http://prezi.com/rbwlrbs1n5oq/caricature-rhetorical-device/ Caricature - a distortion of characteristics or defects of a person or thing, either in a picture or in words

False Assumption False assumption - flawed ideas that emerge when a reader pieces information together solely by inference and fails to consider other possible interpretations What kinds of false assumptions scientists have made in the past, the problems this created, and how they solved the problems?

Incorrect premise Incorrect premise - a faulty idea that is used as the foundation of an argument Everyone wants to get married someday. A good self-concept is important in attracting a husband or wife. Therefore, everyone should develop a good self-concept. If the streets are wet, it has rained recently (false premise). The streets are wet. Therefore it has rained recently.