Credibility of sources
Elements
Examples
Logos
Pathos
100
Websites where the author cannot be determined.
What is a non credible source?
100
A reason or set of reasons given with the aim of persuading others that an action or idea is right or wrong.
What is an argument?
100
"I've found that the needs are so basic," Dabbs said. "They're not asking how to use the latest application; they're asking what kind of lesson plan to do." Will, Madeline. "New Teachers' Quest for Added Support Goes Online." Education Week, 12 Oct. 2016, p
What is a quote?
100
A Greek word meaning logic.
What is logos?
100
An emotional appeal.
What is pathos?
200
Credible sources are written by these people in their respected field of study.
What is the author?
200
A debatable topic.
What is a claim?
200
"New teachers are (sensitive) to asking questions," Elden said. "[There are] questions everyone has, and nobody wants to ask." Will, Madeline. "New Teachers' Quest for Added Support Goes Online." Education Week, 12 Oct. 2016, p
What is pathos?
200
The utilization of inductive and deductive reasoning methods to be effective.
What is logos?
200
1) the state of mind of angry people, 2) who the people are that this audience usually gets angry at, and 3) on what grounds this audience gets angry at those people.
What is things we need to know getting an audience angry?
300
Specific author, audience is clear, credible url, information is not biased.
What is a credible website source?
300
Your opponent's side to the argument.
What is a counterclaim?
300
"It's not based on pedagogy; that's not what new teachers are looking for in a [Twitter] chat," said (Lisa Dabbs,) the chat's founder and an adjunct professor at the University of La Verne, near Los Angeles, as well as an educational consultant who specializes in new-teacher support. Will, Madeline. "New Teachers' Quest for Added Support Goes Online." Education Week, 12
What is credible author?
300
Reasoning that involves a specific representative fact or case which is drawn towards a conclusion or generalization.
What is inductive reasoning?
300
An ad shows dogs being abused and asks for money and sympathy.
What is an example of pathos?
400
Material is published in the last ten years (when more recent information is available).
What is not a credible source?
400
These tell the importance of the claim and argument.
What are the reasons?
400
"Students are more likely to commit certain grammatical errors because they use the conventions of texting, tweeting and Facebooking in their formal academic essays. Occasionally, I see actual 'text language,' like using the letter 'u' instead of the word 'you,'" Sentell wrote.
What is the credible author?
400
Reasoning involving generalization at the initial stage and then moves on towards the specific case.
What is deductive reasoning?
400
Making us feel insecure about our attractiveness or social acceptability and then offer a remedy for this feeling in the form of a product.
What is the effects of pathos ads?
500
A document, speech, or other piece of evidence that was created in a period of study.
What is a credible primary source?
500
This refers to facts that can strengthen your claim or reach a conclusion.
What is evidence?
500
"Election stress becomes exacerbated by arguments, stories, images and video on social media that can heighten concern and frustration, particularly with thousands of comments that can range from factual to hostile or even inflammatory," Lynn Bufka, APA's associate executive director for practice research and policy said in a statement.
What is credible author?
500
All men are mortal. Socrates is a man. Therefore, Socrates is mortal.
What is a syllogistic argument?
500
He pointed out that emotions such as anger, pity, fear, and their opposites, powerfully influence our rational judgments.
Who is Aristotle?