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Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout OBJECTIVE: Students will detect and label BIAS in above-mentioned article.
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Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Lesson 44Today’s Agenda

1. SAT Question of the Day #182. Activity 3.7 “Slanters”

HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout

OBJECTIVE: Students will detect and label BIAS in above-mentioned article.

Page 2: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

SAT Question of the Day #18

Depending on skillful suggestion, argument is seldom used in advertising.

a)Depending on skillful suggestion, argument is seldom used in advertising.

b)Argument is seldom used in advertising, which depends instead on skillful suggestion.

c)Skillful suggestion is depended on by advertisers instead of argument.

d)Suggestion, which is more skillful, is used in place of argument by advertisers.

e)Instead of suggestion, depending on argument is used by skillful advertisers.

Page 3: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Classic Model of Argument

– Claim•Where does it go?•What is the exception?

– Evidence•What kind?

– Concession•What does this do for argument?

– Refutation•How does this support argument?

– Conclusion• In timed writing situations…

Page 4: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

“Slanters” Writers often use inflammatory rhetorical

techniques, known as slanters, in place of logical arguments.

Slanters are used to manipulate readers into accepting a position.

Today, we will look at a number of different types of slanters, which will ultimately be applied to make your more critical readers of argument.

Page 5: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Slanters Sometimes a writer compensates for a

lack of evidence and logical argumentation by using slanted language and emotional appeals to present a prejudiced depiction of a subject.

A slanter is a rhetorical

device used to present a subject in a biased way.

Page 6: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Labeling – Euphemisms and Dysphemisms:

Labeling is the use of a highly connotative word or phrase to name or describe a subject or action. It’s a technique also called using loaded language.

When the connotations are positive (or less negative), the writer is using euphemism.

Conversely, when overtly negative connotations are used, the writer is using dysphemism.

For Example:Consider the differences between the terms

pre- owned vehicle and used car. Pre-owned vehicle is a euphemism while used car is a dysphemism.

Think of the terms freedom fighter and terrorist. Freedom fighter is a euphemism while terrorist is a dysphemism.

Page 7: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Labeling – Euphemisms and Dysphemisms:

Page 8: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Rhetorical Analogy

A rhetorical analogy is the use of a figurative comparison (sometimes a simile or a metaphor) to convey a positive or negative feeling towards the subject.

For Example: In the 2008 presidential race, Sarah

Palin jokingly suggested that she was like a pit bull with lipstick.

In another famous moment of the campaign, John McCain compared Barack

Obama to Paris Hilton, thus suggesting he was an unqualified celebrity.

Page 9: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Rhetorical Analogy

Page 10: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Rhetorical Definition

A rhetorical definition is the use of emotively charged language to express or elicit an attitude about something.

A rhetorical definition stacks the deck either for or against the position it implies.

For Example:When arguing against capital

punishment, many people define it as “government- sanctioned murder.”

Page 11: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Rhetorical Definition

Page 12: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Rhetorical Explanation

A rhetorical explanation is expressing an opinion as if it were fact, and doing so in biased language.

For Example:You might say someone “didn’t have

the guts to fight back” when taunted by another person. This paints the person

as motivated by cowardice. Or you might say the person “took the high road, instead of taking a swing.”

Page 13: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Rhetorical Explanation

Page 14: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Innuendo Innuendo is the use of language to imply

that a particular inference is justified, as if saying “go ahead and read between the lines!”

In this way, the speaker doesn’t have to actually make a claim that can’t be supported; instead, the audience is led to make the leap on their own. For Example:

A presidential candidate might say, “Think carefully about whom you choose; you want a president who will be ready to do

the job on day one.” The implication is that the opposing candidate is not ready.

Page 15: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Innuendo

Page 16: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Downplayers Downplayers is the use of qualifier words

or phrases to make someone or something look less important or significant.

Words like “mere” and “only” work this way, as well, as does the use of quotation marks, to suggest a term is ironic or misleading.

Often these references are linked to concessions with connectors such as nevertheless, however, still, or but. For Example:

“She got her ‘degree’ from correspondence school.”.

Page 17: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Downplayers

Page 18: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Hyperbole Hyperbole is the use of extravagant

overstatement, which can work to move the audience to accept the basic claim even if they reject the extremes of the word choice.

Many of the other slanters can be hyperbolic in the way they are worded, but the key part is that the statement or claim is extreme. For Example:

In response to a dress code, a student might say “This school administration is fascist!”

Page 19: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Hyperbole

Page 20: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Truth Surrogates Truth Surrogates hint that proof exists to

support a claim without actually citing that proof.

If the evidence does exist, the writer is doing a poor job of citing it; meanwhile, the writer has not actually identified any source – or made any claim – that can be easily disproven or challenged. For Example:

Ads often say “studies show,” and tabloids often say things like “according to an insider” or “there’s every reason to believe that . . .”

Page 21: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Truth Surrogates

Page 22: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Ridicule/Sarcasm Ridicule or Sarcasm is the use of language

that suggests the subject is worthy of scorn.

The language seeks to evoke a laugh or sarcastically mock the subject. For Example:

This week, in the New York Daily News, Hank Gola says the following about Tony Romo “The G-forces between those poles have Romo taking the faithful on a dizzying ride that often leads to nausea. The maddening things is that he doesn't stink. He just does dumb things.”Gola is ridiculing Romo for losing a game in the fourth quarter, again.

Page 23: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

Ridicule/Sarcasm

Page 24: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

TEAM CHALLENGE TIME

Page 25: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.
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Page 34: Lesson 44 Today’s Agenda 1.SAT Question of the Day #18 2.Activity 3.7 “Slanters” HW: Read and complete questions over “Abolish High School Football” handout.

EXIT SLIP: Identify it!

Now that you have read and marked the text, go back to the beginning of the editorial, “Abolish High School Football!” and identify the following slanters as follows: Labeling – Highlight

Rhetorical Definition – Underline

Innuendo – Mark with an *asterisk*

Hyperbole – Underline with a swiggly line

Ridicule/Sarcasm – Circle