the daring english teacher

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The Daring English Teacher Thank you for purchasing this resource. Please read the terms of use before distributing these materials. This purchase is good for a single-teacher (or teacher team) classroom license for use in one classroom. If you wish to photocopy and/or digitally share this resource with another teacher, please purchase an additional license at a discounted rate under the “My Purchases” tab on Teachers Pay Teachers. Reproducing any part of this resource for more than one teacher, classroom, or for- profit educational and tutoring centers is strictly prohibited. Publishing this resource online is prohibited. By purchasing this resource, you agree not to post any portion of it online. cannot be distributed or posted electronically, even on classroom websites, without the express written permission of The Daring English Teacher. Doing so violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions. Thank you for your cooperation, The Daring English Teacher [email protected] ©2017-present – The Daring English Teacher, Inc.

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Page 1: The Daring English Teacher

The Daring English TeacherThank you for purchasing this resource.

Please read the terms of use before distributing these materials. This purchase is good for a single-teacher (or teacher team) classroom license for use in one classroom. If you wish to photocopy and/or digitally share this resource with another teacher, please purchase an additional license at a discounted rate under the “My Purchases” tab on Teachers Pay Teachers. Reproducing any part of this resource for more than one teacher, classroom, or for-profit educational and tutoring centers is strictly prohibited. Publishing this resource online is prohibited. By purchasing this resource, you agree not to post any portion of it online. cannot be distributed or posted electronically, even on classroom websites, without the express written permission of The Daring English Teacher. Doing so violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions.

Thank you for your cooperation, The Daring English Teacher

[email protected] ©2017-present – The Daring English Teacher, Inc.

Page 2: The Daring English Teacher

Hello! Thank you so much for downloading this free sample of my rhetorical analysis unit. Teaching rhetorical analysis is one of most favorite units because it is timely. There are so many current events and current speeches that teachers can easily bring into the classroom. Here is a list of some of my favorite speeches to use for rhetorical analysis.

•  I Have a Dream by Martin Luther King, Jr. •  Pearl Harbor Address to the Nation by Franklin Delano Roosevelt - December 8, 1941 •  Farewell to Baseball Address by Lou Gehrig - July 4, 1939 •  Surrender Speech by Chief Joseph - October 5, 1877 •  Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death by Patrick Henry - March 23, 1775 •  What to the Slave is the Fourth of July by Frederick Douglass - July 5, 1852 •  Speech at the March of Washington by Josephine Baker •  Commencement Address at Stanford University By Steve Jobs - June 12, 2005 •  Nobel Lecture by Malala Yousafzai - December 10, 2014 •  9/11 Address to the Nation by George Bush - September 11, 2001 •  Address to the Commonwealth Club of California by Cesar Chavez - November 9, 1984 •  A Left-Handed Commencement Address by Ursula K. Le Guin - May 22, 1983

Of course this is just a list of recommended speeches. You can use this SOAPStone organizer with any speech or rhetorical text. These Rhetorical Analysis lessons and units are available in my TpT store.

Page 3: The Daring English Teacher

Device Definition Example

alliteration The repetition of the same sound or letter at the beginning of several words in a sequence.

“This sweltering summer…”

allusion A short reference to a familiar person, place, thing, or event.

“Five score years ago…” This is an allusion to Abraham Lincoln’s “Gettysburg Address”

anaphora The repetition of the same word or words at the beginning of successive phrases or sentences.

“One hundred years later…” “One hundred years later…”

metaphor A comparison of two different things by speaking about one in terms of the other.

“But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt.”

parallelism A list of successive words or phrases with the same or very similar grammatical structure.

“And they have come to realize that their freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom.”

simile The comparison of two unlike things by using the words “like” or “as.”

“Righteousness like a mighty stream…”

ethos: appeal to authority and credibility pathos: appeal to emotions logos: appeal to logic and fact

Rhetorical Devices

Rhetorical Appeals

© 2018 - present: The Daring English Teacher, Inc. – Not to be published openly online or for open-education sharing

Page 4: The Daring English Teacher

Name: _____________________________________________________ Date: ________________ Per: _______

SOAPStone Analysis Directions: Using the text from a speech, fill out the chart identifying the SOAPStone of the text.

S Speaker

O

Occasion

A Audience

P Purpose

S Subject

tone

Text: __________________________________________________________________________________________

© 2018 - present: The Daring English Teacher, Inc. – Not to be published openly online or for open-education sharing