Unit I
Unit II
Unit III
Unit IV
Extras
100

Define rhetoric, as we've discussed in this class

The art of communication

100

The quality of being trusted and believed in 

Credibility

100

Define Literacy x2

1. The ability to read and write, and

2. Competence or knowledge in a specified area

100

Two main themes this unit

Transfer and Reflection

100

Team Edward or Team Jacob. Why?

Edward because Jacob is a manipulative "nice guy" who doesn't respect female friendships or boundaries. (Dude said he was going to kill himself if she didnt kiss him in eclipse, so)

200

The four rhetorical appeals, and their definitions

Pathos - appeal to emotions

Logos - appeal to logic

Ethos - appeal to ethics and credibility

Kairos - appeal to time and culture

200
Define confirmation bias

What is the tendency to process information by looking for, or interpreting, information that is consistent with one's existing beliefs

200

Vershawn Ashanti Young wrote these two essays:

1. Should Writers Use They Own English

2. "Nah We Straight:" An Argument Against Code-Switching

200

Awareness and understanding of one's own thought processes

Metacognition

200

Define Narrative

A spoken or written account of connected events; a story, containing five key elements:

plot, setting, characters, point of view, and conflict

300

Young defines this as:

blending dos idiomas or copping enough standard English to really make yo' AAE be Da Bomb

Code-Meshing

300

Define subculture

A group of people within a culture that differentiates itself from the parent culture to which it belongs, often maintaining some of its founding principles

300

Wrote "I wish to put my blackness into some kind of order" in their narrative

Kiki Petrosino

300

Defined as the rhetorical mixture of vocabulary, tone, point of view, and syntax that makes phrases, sentences, and paragraphs flow in a particular manner according to a specific author's unique aura and vibe

Voice

300

Define Genre

a category of writing;

any form or type of communication in any mode with socially-agreed-upon conventions developed over time

400

One word definition of: The circumstances that form the setting for an event, statement, or idea, and in terms of which it can be fully understood and assessed.

Context

400

A practice to implement to reduce bias in conducting observations

Double-entry notebook

400

Four of the six types of narrative forms

1. Braided essay

2. Hermit Crab essay

3. Lyrical Essay

4. Fragmented essay

5. Personal reportage essay

6. Graphic essay

400

Through this assignment, the Final Reflection gets turned in

ePortfolio

400

At least four poetic devices

what is metaphor, similie, alliteration, ambiguity, irony, sibilance, onomatopoeia, personification, rhyme, iambic pentameter

500

The point of Nora McInerny's TED Talk about grief. 

We don't "move on" from grief, we move forward with it. 

500

Define Primary and Secondary Research

1. Primary means original, first-hand; the author of the source generated the research data they are using. 

2. Secondary Research: when an author of the source you are using gathers existing data, usually produced by someone else, and they then report, analyze or interpret that other person's data.

500

The 5 modes of communication

Sapcial, aural, gestural, linguistic, and visual. 

500

Evidence you can include in your final reflection (pick 4)

RWJs, formal projects, edit letters, peer and instructor feedback, activities, freewrites, readings, speakers, discussions, our syllabus

500

A poem of fourteen lines using any of a number of formal rhyme schemes, in English typically having ten syllables per line

A sonnet