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In the third quarter of AP English Language, we practiced writing arguments. On each Wednesday for six weeks, we would publish an argument as a blog post. To create the post, we would pick a topic (I usually just scanned the headlines on my Google Reader account), research the topic (which usually consisted of Internet searches for articles to support our opinion), and write an argument. In addition to learning how to use such valuable tools as Google Reader, we also developed personal style, and we were finally able to employ those rhetorical devices that we had learned so much about!
In this artifact, called Unnec*ssary Censorshi*, I point out the many difficulties brought about by our school’s current Web firewall.
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Click here to view my analysis via Scribd.com.
Back in August of 2007, our AP English teacher overwhelmed us with this foreign type of writing assignment called a style analysis—after all, who had ever heard of a “style analysis”? A style analysis prompt asks the student to analyze the rhetorical strategies employed by a given author in a given passage. We practiced in groups, outlined, and finally worked our way up to writing a full blown response—and we have done many, many of them since then. In the artifact above, I analyzed a William Hazlitt passage titled “On the Want of Money.” Analyzing a work of literature is very important, not only in preparation for the AP English Language test and college, but for becoming a responsible adult and citizen. Also, reading and analyzing the rhetorical strategies of accomplished authors helps one to better his own writing.
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During the first, second, and third nine weeks of AP English, we defined a set of words each week. The words ranged from rhetorical terms to tone words to advanced diction. As a class we discussed the literal meaning, use, and connotations of the words, all in an effort to improve our comprehension, expand our vocabulary, and better our writing.
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In the first semester of AP English Language, our teacher allowed us to pick a topic to research (over which we would later write a research paper.) I chose abortion and all the social issues surrounding it. To being my research, I utilized the Internet database EBSCOHost. After searching through hundreds of articles, I found one concerning a proposed law requiring women to view an ultrasound image of their developing fetus before having an abortion. I read the article, analyzed the author’s point of view, presented my opinion on the topic, and pointed out the rhetorical devices that the author used in the passage. I also published this source analysis on my blog for collaboration purposes.
Not only did the process help me better understand the proposed law, but it also taught me how to use an Internet database, how to summarize an article, how to present my viewpoint, and how to cite the source.
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Click here to view my RRJ via Scribd.com.
During the third quarter of the year, our teacher asked us to choose a classic novel to read and complete a reading response journal. I chose John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men. Reading with “rhetorical eyes,” I scoured the novel for rhetorical devices. Interestingly, even though the book was fiction, I found many rhetorical devices within the novel.
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Click here to view my presentation via Scribd.com.
To prepare for the AP English Language test, it is important to be able to analyze visuals–ads, commercials, cartoons. To prepare us for this, our teacher divided our class into groups and directed us to analyze an advertisement from a magazine. We chose to analyze a Dove ad, one that included an American icon–Wilma Flintstone. The ad was infused with rhetorical devices! We then presented the analysis to our class using Microsoft PowerPoint.
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Click here to view our video at TeacherTube.com.
For our first semester review project, our teacher divided our class into several small groups and allowed each group to pick and present one of six available topics. Our group chose “syntax.” After deliberating how to best present the information in a digital format, we chose to use still images, voice recordings, music, and video, and combine them all using Windows Movie Maker. We were able to present to our classmates a simple model that they could apply to any style analysis essay. Not only did it freshen us up on how to analyze an author’s syntax, it also gave us great insight into video production.
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At the end of our sophomore year, our AP teacher-to-be asked that we set up Google Reader accounts. It didn’t take long before we realized true greatness of this free tool. Google Reader allows you to subscribe to many RSS feeds and have them delivered in one place. Rather than scanning a particular Web site for a new article, Google Reader notifies you as soon as new information is published, including a title and a brief synopsis of the article. GR allows users to “star” a specific article for later reference. Users across the world are constantly updating the Web. And, using Google Reader, you can scan a huge amount of information with the scroll of a mouse!
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