These parts of an argument are based on bad reasoning and fragile logic.
What are logical fallacies?
These figures are the ones who need to be convinced a problem exists and what the real problem is.
Who are stakeholders?
This is the technical term for the solution you're proposing for Project 3.
What is the policy?
This is what you do after you write the first draft of an essay in order to improve it.
What is revision?
These are "intentional decisions about the stylistic and grammatical choices" available to you as a writer.
What is rhetorical grammar?
These three components make up the rhetorical triangle.
What are logos, ethos, and pathos?
Project 2 asked you to do this. It is also the name of the unit.
What is identify the problem?
The Toulmin method of argument is made up of these six components (in no particular order): grounds, claim, warrant, backing, qualifier, and _________.
What is rebuttal?
Collaborative writing is what we're doing when we participate in ________, a time for us to review one another's writing and give fruitful suggestions.
What is workshopping?
This method of argumentation recognizes the validity of the other side's argument before trying to refute it.
What is Rogerian argument?
The components of this concept include purpose, audience, context, writer, and topic.
What is the rhetorical situation?
Stasis theory asks you to analyze issues of fact, _____, quality, and policy.
What is definition?
We used this form of rhetoric when studying the effectiveness of the PSAs.
What is visual rhetoric?
This pre-writing process asks you to map out what you want to say in each paragraph, support you'll use for your ideas, and may be in a list form.
What is an outline?
This is a nickname for an opening sentence that captures your audience's attention.
What is a hook?
This logical fallacy relies on the idea that if other people are doing it, you should too.
What is bandwagon fallacy?
This rhetorical tool asks you to compare two arguments to see where they agree and disagree.
What is stasis theory?
You use this form of reasoning when you have to infer information from something.
What is deductive reasoning?
This concept is defined as "an anti-racist approach to language and literacy education."
What is linguistic justice?
This logical fallacy refers to using distraction tactics to keep audiences away from the real issue. A little "fishy" if you ask me...
What is a red herring?
This term describes your personal background and how it affects the way you think.
What is positionality?
A works cited with a paragraph explanation of the source/your use of it is called an ____________.
What is an annotated bibliography?
These are the meanings of each part of the acronym C.R.A.P.
What are contrast, repetition, alignment, and proximity?
While they can be fun in popular culture, these modes of visual communication can also be persuasive or argumentative.
What are memes?
This scholar proposed the theories of "identification" and "terministic screens."
Who is Kenneth Burke?