Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Journal 10

Let's do a simple brainstorm again. You are going to be working in groups to create an interesting and original blog about some issue in American culture. Your options are endless. I've had students write about the weird things people do while driving; I've had students write about the greatest football tackles of all time; I've had students document the bizarre and extreme plastic surgeries that celebrities have and the public response. The idea is to pick something that you think will really, really excite your audience because it's fun and interesting and shocking, etc. Blogs are meant to entertain.

You don't need to respond to a peer, but write a paragraph thinking about some ideas that you would be interested in doing. Be specific and think original. When you get into groups, this will help speed up which idea you decide to do together and you can get started on a plan for the group work days next week.

FYI, these are my favorite projects of the semester because my students always do really wonderful topics and we have a good time looking at them on present days ;)

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Journal 9

For this journal, I want you to find a complex image--an advertisement, a political cartoon, a commercial, a photograph, etc--and paste it into your post. Analyze the image using 2-3 of our key terms, like you would in your paper. I encourage you to consider posting the image you want to use in your paper that way I can respond if I see one that just isn't going to work well; plus, you'll have some peer response to help you.

In your peer response, I want you to again choose another key term (that the author hasn't used) and add to their analysis in 3-4 sentences. Really try to give them some ideas/details they could use for another term. This will be helpful as you start your drafts.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Journal 8

We need to continue practicing how to rhetorically analyze an image. So, choose one of the images from this week's reading and do the following: 1) Identify, in a thesis statement, the argument the image is making and 2) Use one of our key words to analyze it (medium, purpose, audiences, design, structure, subjects, logos, ethos, pathos, or kairos)

In your response to a peer, continue their analysis by using a DIFFERENT key term.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Journal 7

Time to recall the skills we learned for paper one, rhetorical analysis. We are beginning a unit that will ask you to analyze visual arguments: bumper stickers, posters, political cartoons, advertisements, commercials, photographs, etc. You've read about visuals aimed at politics and advocacy and should be able to define what will be our key terms for this unit: subjects, purpose, audiences, contexts, medium, structure, and design. Of course, we will also need logos, ethos, pathos, and kairos. Choose one of the images in the series from today's reading and answer all three questions Beyond Words poses for that image.

In your response to your peer, you may want to reflect on how their analysis makes you see the image differently than you did before. You may want to add analysis they missed. You may want to challenge their analysis and present a counterargument to the argument the image makes. You have many options, but remember that we are down to our last three journals so you'll want to think about answers that give more than a basic response.