Teach rhetorical devices through movement and color-coding! This rhetorical appeal lesson will help students understand Aristotle's rhetorical triangle through a kinesthetic strategy and then will give students a highlighting technique to apply to any rhetorical analysis! No matter the rhetorical writing prompt, reading analysis, or propaganda scrutiny, this color-coding activity proves to be a great way to analyze rhetorical appeals. It works well with English, history, and speech classes. This rhetorical activity is also a fantastic way to incorporate self-assessment in argumentative writing! You will get: ⭐A movement strategy to teach the rhetorical triangle ⭐A presentation to teach rhetorical devices ⭐A printable reference graphic for rhetorical appeals ⭐An example paragraph with each appeal and answer key ⭐Three commercial links with persuasive techniques ⭐An editable slide for further rhetorical examples ✅ Use digitally or print! Related Products ❤️ Literary Yoga: Yoga for the English Classroom
Persuasive or Rhetorical Appeals are the building blocks for persuasive or argumentative essay writing. This complete lesson is designed introduce middle-high school students to the terms ethos, pathos, and logos. Student Experience: Students will step into the world of ethos, pathos, and logos with the mindset that these are the key pieces in argumentation. As you deliver the lecture with the eye-catching, no-prep PPT, students will fill in their sketch notes. You will guide them through several models, and examples, and then they will complete the guided practice. Next, students will identify the terms you just covered in modern examples and complete an interactive vocabulary exercise. To further their application and understanding, students will participate in a gallery walk. Finally, the worksheet and quiz provided will provide you with the assessment you need to measure understanding. Included: Lecture in 100% editable PPT and Google format (with ORIGINAL print examples and video links) Sketch Notes for Guided Note taking (not editable due to font and style choices) Guided Practice Interactive, editable sorting activity in print and Google digital format Interactive, no-prep gallery walk for identifying and analyzing ethos, pathos, and logos with original ads and textual examples along with commercials Practice Worksheet Two editable quizzes - One vocab quiz is self-checking Lesson plan and suggestion pacing Graphic organizer students can use with any text for success after the lesson Modern-style Classroom Posters Plus, be sure to check out my Ethos, Pathos, Logos Breakout game, which isnot included in the bundle mentioned above! Ethos, Pathos, Logos Breakout Game Classroom success stories from teachers who have tried this resource: ♥ "Excellent for my 7th graders to grasp the concepts, thank you! Thank you for a concise lesson for these concepts." ♥ "This is the first time I've taught this topic and it was so nice to have this unit - it was a HUGE help!" ♥ "This was an excellent ppt with fun video links my HS students enjoyed. Thank you!" ♥ "I used this with my students before we evaluated texts and various other media for Ethos, Pathos, and Logos. This purchase is very student friendly. Takes away all of the extra explaining for me." ♥ "This seller seeks to create innovative lessons that truly engage learners. I have personally reached out, and she responds with great empathy. This resource is great, and the seller highly recommended!" ♥ "This was a lot better than what I had! Students loved the easy notes sheet, and it has been helpful!" ♥ "For introducing rhetorical devices this was a great pack. I have 9th grade students and need to expose them this year for next year. I found the examples great!" Each of my ELA skills-readiness "How to Teach It" Lesson Packs includes a teacher's guide lesson plan, an easy-to-use PPT lecture explaining the concept, guided practice, opportunity for collaborative and individual practice, and a form of assessment. See my other English standards skills readiness teaching packs, and teach the fundamental skills first for success! Summarizing Close Reading & Annotating Citing Textual Evidence Evaluate the credibilityof Websites Propaganda and Logical Fallacies Allusions Setting Affects Plot Theme Development Symbolism Characterization Conflict Affects Plot Author’s Perspective Homophones, Frequently Confused Words Be the first to know about my new discounts, freebies, and product launches. Look for the green star next to my store logo and click it to FOLLOW ME. Voila! You will now receive email updates about my store. For more ideas and inspiration: Faulkner's Fast Five Blog Julie's Classroom Stories on Instagram Julie's Classroom Stories on Facebook Teaching Middle and High School English Facebook Group Yearbook and Journalism Facebook Group Email List for English and Yearbook Teachers Pinterest Created 2014-Updated 2024 Terms of Use: Please one classroom use only. Not to be shared online without proper security. Additional licenses sold at a discount at checkout. **Images and art are documented on credits page in download.
Teach rhetorical devices through movement and color-coding! This rhetorical appeal lesson will help students understand Aristotle's rhetorical triangle through a kinesthetic strategy and then will give students a highlighting technique to apply to any rhetorical analysis! No matter the rhetorical writing prompt, reading analysis, or propaganda scrutiny, this color-coding activity proves to be a great way to analyze rhetorical appeals. It works well with English, history, and speech classes. This rhetorical activity is also a fantastic way to incorporate self-assessment in argumentative writing! You will get: ⭐A movement strategy to teach the rhetorical triangle ⭐A presentation to teach rhetorical devices ⭐A printable reference graphic for rhetorical appeals ⭐An example paragraph with each appeal and answer key ⭐Three commercial links with persuasive techniques ⭐An editable slide for further rhetorical examples ✅ Use digitally or print! Related Products ❤️ Literary Yoga: Yoga for the English Classroom
9-slide PowerPoint shows how these classical Greek strategies can help persuade your audience to your argument with reason, emotion, credibility, and timeliness for better essay writing and critical thinking (also mentions appeals of Topos/strategic style and Telos/noble purpose). PPT must be in Slide-Show mode to activate the looping animations. Note: You can pause an animated GIF during a PowerPoint Slide Show by Right-Clicking your mouse, and then later resume animation with a Left-Click. This mouse-trick works in PPT 2010, but other PPT versions may work differently. Used/tested and engaging with English Composition, English 101. To learn how to make such animated GIFs using PowerPoint and a free online AGIF maker, see PowerPoint slide show Animated GIFs—How to Make and Use.
Teaching rhetorical appeals and persuasive techniques? Here are five commercials that will help demonstrate ethos, pathos, and logos appeals.
Introduce your study of rhetorical appeals (ethos, pathos, logos) and persuasive techniques with this background activity. You get an activity on Aristotle and the Rhetorical Triangle. This is a strong foundation for studying media literacy. Highlights: ✅ Two videos and an article (found for free online) ✅ Traditional worksheets or with ISNs ✅ Whole class activity or stations Your Introduction to Rhetoric activity includes: A full lesson plan Two pages of notes An answer key ❤️ Be sure to check out my entire Persuasive Techniques & Media Literacy Unit! This bundle has tons of activities to practice identifying persuasive appeals, using persuasion creativity, and applying this understanding to multimedia. What other teachers are saying: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ “Great tool for me to introduce the persuasive writing unit with my grade 8 students!” -Monica W. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ “Teaching rhetoric to any grade level is a challenge for me as I have always struggled with it. [This activity] is clear, concise, fun, and easy! And, of course, giving students a chance to color while working is always a plus! Thank you!” -Alexis M. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ “This is great! You break down the differences between ethos, logos, and pathos very clearly and that makes it so much easier for students to understand these concepts. Thanks!” -Susan About Your Resource: Your Introduction to Rhetoric activity is a PDF download and is not editable. Thank you so much for understanding! Feedback & Followers Did you know that you can receive credit towards future TpT purchases by reviewing paid products? If you enjoy this product, please leave a review at the product page or through “My Purchases” under “My Account” at TpT. Ratings make the TpT world go round. :) You can also follow me for the latest news on products and sales. If you have any questions, I’d love to hear from you! -Danielle @ Nouvelle ELA
Although they may be ancient, Aristotle's three persuasive appeals do not have to be boring! Engage your students and improve their rhetorical analysis and persuasive writing skills by teaching them about ethos, pathos, and logos with this 23-slide PowerPoint (in PDF form to preserve fonts/formattin...
You can wield tremendous power by mastering persuasive advertising techniques. But to start you’ll need a solid grounding in the rhetorical triangle: ethos, pathos and logos.nThese techniques will unlock the ability to sell convincingly to your consumer.
Although they may be ancient, Aristotle's three persuasive appeals do not have to be boring! Engage your students and improve their rhetorical analysis and persuasive writing skills by teaching them about ethos, pathos, and logos with this bundle hat you can use to meet your students at their own un...
It's time to collaborate and get your students moving! Teachers love using literature circles for small groups, book clubs, and collaborative learning. Your students will love their collaborative poster for any text focusing on the art of persuasion- rhetoric, ethos, pathos, and logos. This digital download includes the teacher procedure, suggestions, step by step set up, ethos, pathos, logos collaborative poster printable, student reflection questions, completed example and literature circle rubric. This classroom activity allows students to engage with others. Students will work together in small groups to share ideas and respond to tasks and their text. Students who have a hard time sitting quietly will find this activity helpful. Ethos, Pathos, and Logos are modes of persuasion used to convince audiences. Teachers are always looking for new ways to differentiate their lessons and include more collaborative projects for their students. As an English teacher, I have found that using Literature Circles work wonderfully. If you are limited in your choice of text, this also works well with whole-class readings. The art of persuasion works great with any rhetoric, speech, text, or persuasive writing unit. Assessment Teachers use the student reflection and literature circles rubric for assessment. LITERATURE CIRCLES, ART OF PERSUASION, ETHOS, PATHOS, LOGOS, POSTER FOR ANY TEXT: ★Small group poster- comes with 4 pieces for your students to collaborate. Groups of 2-6 can work together successfully and harmoniously. -You just need to print one collaborative poster for each group. ★ Aristotle, rhetoric, and persuasion ★Perfect for a literature circle, respond to an article, book club, student-centered review, whole class novel study in small groups. ★Poster Rubric Checklist and Lit Circle Rubric ★Lit Circle Reflection Questions ★Group signs and display signs ★Teacher instructions for literature circles, collaboration poster, gallery walks, philosophy, background on sketchnotes ★One-pager for a notebook or binder. Perfect for guided notes. This type of collaborative activity is perfect for any of time of the year. For teachers especially! It is a student-centered approach and modern teaching strategy. You get to walk around, sit with different groups, and observe! Literature circles are meant to be a monitored activity. Small Group Collaborative Posters This art of persuasion collaborative poster is triple the fun with the combination of coloring, creativity, and text or concept analysis poster group work! Watch students and staff stop and look at the completed works...very eye-catching! The poster is 4 pieces. Completed it is - 20 X 16 IN. You'll love watching your students collaborate. The activity is designed for students to communicate and work together. Works with your own choice of text. Recommended supplies needed: crayons, colored pencils, scissors, tape or stapler Please provide me with really appreciated feedback! Share your classroom masterpiece with me! Study All Knight Blog Study All Knight Facebook Danielle Knight (Study All Knight) on Pinterest Study All Knight on Twitter Study All Knight on Instagram Created by Danielle Knight, © Study All Knight, 2018.
Begin your argument unit by teaching the three pillars of persuasion- Ethos, Pathos, and Logos! These rhetorical devices will guide your students towards analyzing rhetoric as well as writing their own arguments effectively! This is also digital resource. It can be used for distance or e-learning. Each activity will contain a Google File Link Page that will provide you with a Google Doc/Slides for each activity. A video tutorial I created will provide you with some tech tools to assist you with delivering the content via distance learning. Included with Purchase: ☑ Real-life examples in media to analyze! ☑ A lesson in Ethos, Pathos, Logos- 36 slides of info, definitions, notes, and examples that connect to media advertising, social media, marketing tools, and human behavior. Each pillar of persuasion also provides a how-to slide for students to apply this tool to their writing! ☑ Student-led in-depth exploration with video examples and explanations that are engaging and unique. ☑ Application activity that gets students moving and collaborating. ☑ Bell Ringer practice to analyze Ethos, Pathos, Logos in advertising and rhetoric to reinforce skills each day and engage students in learning! ☑ Beautiful classroom anchor chart poster ✢ Google Docs and Microsoft Office documents provided ✢ No Prep Plans- Just print or link and go! ✨ CCSS Aligned❢✨ Suggested Unit Outline: ❶ This Ethos, Pathos, Logos lesson ❷ Logical fallacies ❸ Analyzing arguments lesson ❹ Student written/crafted argument! Follow my store by clicking on the link at the top of the page for updates, announcements, and fun freebies! You can also find me at my blog, on Facebook, on Instagram, and on Twitter. This unit is apart of my larger Analyzing Rhetoric Unit Bundle- you can save money by purchasing this bundle: Rhetorical Analysis Unit Bundle- Digital and Printable! Other Analyzing Rhetoric Lessons to Consider: Analyzing Arguments with Dr. King's Letter from a Birmingham Jail Logical Fallacies made Easy! Rhetoric- Ethos/Pathos/Logos Bell Ringer Activities! Rhetorical Analysis-Analyzing an Author's Argument Save money with these UNIT BUNDLES! Analyze Arguments: King's Letter from a Birmingham Jail- COMPLETE UNIT BUNDLE! Rhetorical Analysis Unit Bundle Analyze an Author's Argument with Atticus Finch's Closing Arguments-
This is a two page Rhetorical Triangle. The first page divides up the triangle into writer, audience, and content sections along with questions that address those categories. The second page extends the triangle to pathos, ethos, and logos along with questions that address those concepts.
Teaching Rhetoric in your classroom? Use this great poster to help students grasp the concepts of Aristotle's Ethos, Pathos, and Logos. ✎ Ethos: Intelligence Virtue Morals Perception of trustworthiness ✎ Pathos: Emotions and feelings Biases and prejudices Senses Motivations ✎ Logos: Evidence Testimony Statistics and data Universal truths ✎ Want more? Find this in our Ethos, Pathos, Logos Bundle ✎ Read More Here: Ethos, Pathos, & Logos Article ✎ This poster is a part of our ELA Poster Mega Pack! ************************************************************************ More Posters for Your Classroom: ✎ Literary Conflict Poster ✎ Plot Diagram ✎ Narrative Structure ✎ Parts of Speech ✎ Story Structure - Parts of a Story **************************************************************** This guide is brought to you by the award-winning Storyboard That team of teachers, educators, and more.
Looking for a comprehensive bundle to teach rhetorical appeals? This Ethos, Pathos, Logos Activities Bundle is the perfect resource for helping students master the art of persuasion. Designed for middle and high school classrooms, this bundle includes everything you need to engage students in learning ethos, pathos, logos and persuasive techniques. With worksheets, task cards, and a fun toy pitch activity, this bundle provides a complete package for introducing and practicing rhetorical appeals. This bundle is packed with ethos, pathos, logos activities that promote critical thinking and creativity. Whether used for individual practice, group work, or classroom discussions, these resources will enhance your students' understanding of persuasive techniques and rhetorical appeals. Perfect for classroom instruction or as a fun project to reinforce these essential skills, this bundle makes learning persuasive writing both engaging and educational. Equip your students with the tools they need to craft compelling arguments and master the art of persuasion today! What's Included: Ethos, Pathos, Logos Teaching Worksheets and Activities: These worksheets are designed to help students identify and apply the key rhetorical appeals in various contexts, with prompts and ethos, pathos, logos activities that build understanding. 20-Question Ethos, Pathos, Logos Task Card Bundle: These task cards challenge students to analyze real-world examples of persuasive communication, helping them sharpen their ability to recognize how ethos, pathos, logos are used effectively. Toy Pitch Project: In this engaging activity, students invent a silly or creative toy and use rhetorical appeals (ethos, pathos, logos) to pitch it to their classmates, practicing persuasive skills in a fun and interactive way. ☆ Please contact me with any questions about this resource using the ask a question feature on TPT or e-mail me at [email protected]. Happy teaching! ❤️ Samantha ★ Looking for more great secondary ELA tips and resources from Samantha in Secondary? ✅ Follow me on TPT (Get 50% off new resources!) ✅ Check out the latest on Instagram ✅ Subscribe to my email list for weekly updates
Teaching rhetorical appeals and persuasive techniques? Here are five commercials that will help demonstrate ethos, pathos, and logos appeals.