Transcript Warm-Up

Quotes to use in essays
My fellow Americans,
ask not what your
country can do for you,
ask what you can do for
your country.
John F. Kennedy
Reflection
Do NOT write this! Do
this!
(On this side you write
YOUR thoughts and
feelings about this
quote. Try and connect
it to your life or the life
of someone you know
in someway)
 When
you are finished:
◦Go back through pages 2328
 underline the new setting (pg.
28)
 Highlight on page 23 where it
says “Our eyes opened. Too
late.” Write in the margin your
answer to these two questions:
How were their “eyes opened?”
Why was it too late?
 When
you are finished:
◦Go back through pages 2328
 underline the new setting (pg.
28)
 Highlight on page 23 where it
says “Our eyes opened. Too
late.” Write in the margin your
answer to these two questions:
How were their “eyes opened?”
Why was it too late?
 Rhetorical
Appeals: Ethos, Pathos,
Logos foldable
◦ You need two pieces of paper. Line them up and
fold
 We
will be practicing the
identification of appeals for the
next week
Logos, Pathos, Ethos
Logos: logical appeal
Pathos: emotional appeal
Ethos: ethical appeal
The Greek philosophers
also gave us the
rhetorical triangle, which
argues that all forms of
communication are a
conversation between the
text, the audience and the
author.
Text
(Logos)
conversation
Audience
(Pathos)
Author
(Ethos)
Most persuasive texts will
use some combination of
the three appeals to get
their message across.
Each of the appeals
corresponds to a part of
the rhetorical triangle
(pictured here).
Text
(Logos)
conversation
Audience
(Pathos)
Author
(Ethos)
 Logos
appeals to logic and may include facts,
statistics, or “quotes”
 This information is used as evidence within
the text to support your argument and
persuade the audience.
Example: “Nine out of ten health
professionals agree, an apple a day
really does keep the doctor away.”
 Logos
literally means the “word”
 Dialogue is the exchange of words between
two people.
 A monologue is the delivery of words from
one person without any expectation of a
response.
 A logo is a symbol that represents all the
words (and ideas) associated with a company
or brand.
Here we see a chart
showing a correlation
between the fall of
pirates and rise of
natural disasters. Are
you convinced by these
statistics?
 Pathos
appeals to the emotions, needs and
wants of the listener.
 This strategy attempts to influence or
manipulate the emotions and desires of the
audience in order to persuade or convince the
listener that their argument is true.
Can you name any propaganda techniques
that rely on emotional appeals?
 Sympathy
and empathy are both emotional
states and have to do with shared feelings.
 Pathological liars have no feelings of guilt
when they do not tell the truth.
 If someone is pathetic, they are pitifully sad.
Many of the stories we hear
and read as children are
written to appeal to our
emotions so that we will be
persuaded to follow certain
social and moral codes
(which brings us to the next
part of the rhetorical
triangle—ethos… Can you
name the moral of the
story?)
 Ethos
appeals to our sense of ethics,
including social and moral codes, trust, and
credibility.
 There are two kinds of ethos—artistic and
inartistic.
Artistic ethos is created and sustained through the
delivery of the message.
Inartistic ethos pre-exists and comes along with
someone’s status or station.
 An
officer of the law has inartistic ethos
because of the station they hold (we trust
them because of their position).
 However, that same officer can lose our trust
by their actions, as in the case of Rodney
King.
 The
President of the United States has
inartistic ethos because of their station (we
applaud Presidents when they enter a room to
deliver a speech).
 However, the President can lose our trust
through his or her actions (or through their
artistic ethos).
Can you think of any other examples?
 Ethics
are a set of moral principles, or a theory
or system of moral values.
 If you are an ethical person, you are considered
a good person and you most likely follow the
rules.
 If someone has a good work ethic, they have a
strong belief in work as a moral good. In other
words, they work hard because they believe it
is the right thing to do.

With your o’clock partner
1. Write the model sentence in your notes (after the
ones you just glued in)
2. Circle the correlative conjunctions in the sentence
3. Choose a way to revise the sentence. Don’t
change the entire sentence because it's already a
great sentence. Try to add to it.
(Like, change a pronoun to a noun so we know who or
what the sentence is about, or add an adjective or
adverb. Or, if it's a compound sentence, make it two
sentences. Write your revised version on the folder)
3. Create an imitation sentence. Format it just like
the
model sentence. Write it on the sentence
strip.


Focus on the conflict so far in the story. Is it
internal or external? Underline evidence to
back up your idea while reading.
Go back through pages 47-58
◦
◦
◦
◦
Highlight and label the simile on page 50
Highlight and label the personification on page 52
Bracket the Flash-forward on pages 53-54
Highlight and label the simile on page 54
In the novel, is the conflict internal or external?
Use evidence from the text to support your
answer.
Sentence stem: The conflict can be described
as ____________ because___________ as shown
on page__ “__________ .”



Review the characterization chart in your
“Reader’s Notebook”
Read pages 58-72
Focus on the character of Elie (the narrator)
 Underline “Narrator’s Statements” –what he says about
himself
 Circle character’s actions, speech, and thoughts
 Star other character’s actions & speech about Elie

Go back through pages 58-72
◦ Highlight and label the metaphor on pg. 59
◦ Highlight the last sentence before the break on
page 63 (it starts with “I remember...”) and answer
this question in the margin: Why did the soup taste
better?
◦ Highlight the last sentence of the chapter (it starts
with “That night...”) and answer this question in the
margin: Why did the soup taste of corpses?
Back-To-School: College Freshman Advice
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c_x_5tbb7W
0

*Which two pieces of advice do you plan to
follow?
*Discuss your choices with a shoulder partner


Gallows (n.): a structure on which a criminal
who has been sentenced to death is killed by
being hanged
Sentence: One week later, as we returned
from work, there, in the middle of the camp,
in the Appelplatz, stood a black gallows (pg.
61).