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Teach BeTween the Lines

Teach BeTween the Lines

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English Teacher Life-Blog

English Teacher Life - A Blog for Secondary ELA Teachers to connect over our unique content. English teacher inspiration, ideas, lesson ideas, and free ELA resources!

Rhetorical Analysis - a Fun Acronym and 5 Mini-Lessons to Get You Started!

February 2, 2020 Elizabeth Taylor
a Fun Acronym and 5 Mini-Lessons to Get You Started! (2).png

Teachers are professional acronym and mnemonic device creators. Love them or leave them, acronyms and mnemonic devices are important, well-supported learning strategies, and I have found them to be particularly useful when teaching students about arguments and persuasion. 

When I introduce the many pieces of rhetorical analysis to my students, I use the term SMELL to focus their learning. It is not a surprise that teenagers find my SMELL-y mnemonic device entertaining, and several snickers are shared as I introduce it, but it's memorable, and that is what matters. I tell my students we are going to SMELL out an author's argument (complete with a slide with a large nose on it). In my class, we use SMELL to analyze and evaluate an author's argument, the logic of their reasoning, and the relevance of their evidence. In case you were wondering what the letters mean, let me enlighten you.

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In Argument Writing, Literary Analysis, Reading Instruction, Rhetorical Analysis Tags Rhetorical Analysis, Analyzing Rhetoric, Persuasive appeals, Persuasive writing, persuasive strategies, ethos, ethos pathos logos, logical fallacies
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