2013 Summer Workshops in Teaching Writing: Teaching Persuasive Writing

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

2013 Summer Workshops in Teaching Writing: Teaching Persuasive Writing. What do we mean when we say “Persuasive” Writing?. And how is that different from “Argumentative” writing? …let’s try an experiment . With a partner take turns - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

2013 Summer Workshops in Teaching Writing: Teaching Persuasive Writing

What do we mean when we say “Persuasive” Writing?

• And how is that different from “Argumentative” writing?

• …let’s try an experiment

With a partner take turns

• Argue with your partner about which pet is better—cats or dogs?– (and this matters because who ever wins the

argument will only be left with that pet)

• Now again with your partner take turns

• 1: Persuade your partner to volunteer at Haven for Hope

• 2: Persuade your partner to go see a movie with you

What’s the difference?

Argumentation• Tends to be antagonistic • Debate between contending

points of view• Dependent more on reason

and logic for its appeals(think lawyer)

Persuasion• May not be so antagonistic• Focused on motivating

someone to see, feel, think, or do something

• Naturally leans on appeals of ethos and pathos more than logos(think salesman)

So what does mean “Persuasive Writing” for the STAAR Test?

STAAR Persuasive Writing Prompts

--focus on an issuethat is debatable orcontroversial and ask students to takea “position” or sideon the issue and arguefor that position.

--it leans more heavily on presenting REASONS in support of the position than on ethos or pathos

In college writing, everything is an argument

But college writing does not mean “argue” in the sense of lawyerly argumentation

Joseph Williams Writing in Collegehttp://writing-program.uchicago.edu/resources/collegewriting/high_school_v_college.htm

Crossing2College: A Resource for College-Readiness in Writing

Recommended