What are the three persuasion techniques/rhetoric devices in advertising?
Ethos, pathos, and logos
What is The Giver's daughter's name?
Rosemary
What does CER and RACE stand for?
CER: Claim, Evidence Reasoning
RACE: Restate, Answer, Cite, Explain
What do we call the most important person in a story?
What are the 5 senses we use to make observations?
Sight (eyes), Smell (nose), Taste (tongue), Hearing (ears), Touch (hands/skin)
What does pathos mean?
Using emotions to persuade someone
What item does Jonas see color on first?
an apple
What do we call it when we take an authors words and put them directly into our paper.
A direct quote
What is the word for the main "issue" or "problem" in the plot?
The "CONFLICT" of a story/plot
What is the difference between a "utopia" and a "dystopia"
Utopia: "perfect" society
Dystopia: flawed society with strict government rules.
What does logos mean?
using facts/logic to persuade someone
What job does Jonas's father hold in the community?
Nurturer
What is the "heart" of an argument?
YOUR CLAIM
What do we call the most important, exciting part of the plot?
The "CLIMAX"
What is the difference between an "observation" and an "inference"
OBSERVATION: can not argue with, uses 5 senses
INFERENCE: a good guess based on what you observe
answers will vary
What genre is "The Giver?"
dystopian fiction
What is a counter claim?
An argument against the main claim of your essay
What do we call the first part of a story where character and setting are first described?
What is the difference between a Simile and a Metaphor?
Simile: Compares two things using like or as
Metaphor: Compares two things NOT using like or as
What is a target audience?
A specific group of people that advertisers try to persuade.
Which rule is most frequently broken in the community?
Children are not supposed to ride bikes until they are nine
What is reasoning?
REASONING explains how your evidence supports your claim.
List THREE of the parts of the plot diagram. (HINT: there are 6 total)
Exposition, Conflict, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, Resolution
Describe what each of these types of writing means: (Narrative, Explanatory, Argument)
NARRATIVE: has characters, setting, conflict, and a plot
EXPLANATORY: explains an idea or position
ARGUMENT: argues for or against a certain point of view