ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGES |
---|---|
2 Major Projects | 50% |
6 Web Posts | 20% |
Class Participation | 20% |
1 Portfolio and Portfolio Review | 10% |
A list of topics by session is available in the calendar listed below.
"Rhetoric is the antistrophos * to dialectic."
* counterpart, correlative, coordinate, or converse
Rhetoric is the ability to discover in each particular
case all the available means of persuasion.
This course is an introduction to the history, theory, practice, and implications of rhetoric, the art and craft of persuasion.
Through class discussions, presentations, and written assignments, you will get to practice your own rhetorical prowess. Through the readings, you will also learn some ways to make yourself a more efficient reader, as you use your analytical skills on the texts themselves. This combination of reading, speaking, and writing will help you succeed in:
This is a Communications Intensive and HASS-D Subject.
The course work is primarily "front-loaded," and a series of Web short postings will help you accomplish the two major assignments in this course in a series of steps. Finally, you will notice that there are two conference times this semester with me as well as peer review and workshops. These are further meant to help you finish the course assignments. Most importantly, you should have fun in this course!
All readings are available in the readings section.
In all academic writing you must give citations each time you use someone else's ideas, someone else's words, someone else's phrasing, someone else's unusual information. Furthermore, you show appropriate respect for other writers and thinkers by giving them credit for their ideas, their structures, their phrasings, and their information. In Western culture, not giving credit is an insult as well as an act of dishonesty. In other words, never take credit for someone else's words, ideas, or style (this prohibition includes material found on the Web). Although the material on the Web is free, you did not create it; someone else thought it, researched it, wrote it-and that someone must be given credit.
There are several guidelines for using sources in your academic writing:
In sum, your essays should always be your own work (although you are encouraged to seek writing advice from the Writing Center and from your workshop groups). Your essays should always be your new work created specifically for this course (do not hand in work written for other courses-neither from this semester nor from previous semesters, and this prohibition includes modifying or adapting your own work from other courses).
If I request, you must hand in hard copies of all the sources that you used for writing an essay, as well as your notes. If you cannot produce these materials when requested, your final course grade will be reduced by one letter grade for each instance that you cannot produce your data. Also, you are responsible for ensuring that others do not copy your work or submit it as their own.
This course requires your attendance, participation, and on-time submission of assignments:
This course is meant to be an intellectual exploration. Consequently only the two major projects and the portfolio will receive letter grades. The postings will receive only √+, √, or √- Your grade in this class will be based on the following:
ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGES |
---|---|
2 Major Projects | 50% |
6 Web Posts | 20% |
Class Participation | 20% |
1 Portfolio and Portfolio Review | 10% |
Please see the assignments for descriptions of these activities.
SES # | TOPICS | KEY DATES |
---|---|---|
1 | Introductions | |
2 | What is Rhetoric? | |
3 | Say again! What is Rhetoric? | Web post 0 due |
4 | The Three Types of Classical Rhetoric | Web post 1 due Project 1 out |
5 | Points-at-Issue | Web post 2 due |
6 | The Down and Dirty Rhetoric | Project 1: sample article due |
7 | Workshop Day | Project 1: 200 word proposal due Web post 3 due |
8-9 | Practice Presentations | |
10 | Final Presentations | Final presentations due Draft of project 1 paper due Final paper for project 1 due by 9 days after Ses #10 |
11 | More Aristotle: Pathos: The Rhetoric of Emotions | |
12 | More Pathos | Web post 4 due Project 2 out |
13 | Workshop Day | Revision of project 1 paper due Major project 2 proposal due |
14 | Introduction to Visual Rhetoric and the Perils of Power-Point (Lecture) | |
15 | More Topics | |
16 | Practice Presentations in Class | |
17 | Final Presentation Project 2 | Final presentation project 2 due Draft of project 2 paper due Conference sign-up |
18 | Rhetorical Style I | |
19 | Rhetorical Style 2 | Web post 6 due |
20 | Rhetorical Style 3 | |
21 | Last Day of class Discussion | Sign-up for final conference Revision of project 2 slides due 1 day after Ses #21 Revision of project 2 paper due 2 days after Ses #21 |
22 | Final Conferences | Portfolio and portfolio review due |