Analyzing Rhetorical Appeals: A Lesson for College Students

Lesson plan, grade levels.

Undergraduate and AP English

  Objectives

Students will gain skills in analyzing rhetorical appeals (logos, ethos, and pathos).

Students will glean insights into the rhetorical appeals in Mike Bunn’s essay “How to Read like a Writer.”

  • Students will learn about the elements of text (argument, evidence, and appeals) and context (author, audience, and conversation) in the essay.

Background and Context

I taught this lesson as part of a rhetorical analysis unit in a first-year college writing class, though the activities could also be adapted for a high school class, such as the AP English Language and Composition course.

Total Estimated Class Time

A single class period (approx. 45 mins.)

Sequence of Activities

1. Journal (10 mins.)

Students independently respond to a journal prompt:

What persuasive strategies do authors, speakers, advertisers, and others use to convey a message to an audience? (Please write 5–8 sentences.)

After offering students time to reflect and respond to the journal prompt, the teacher should ask students to share their journal responses with a partner sitting near them. The teacher should then ask a few volunteers to share their ideas with the class.

2. Rhetorical Appeals in Super Bowl Commercials (10–15 mins.)

The teacher should show the class the following Super Bowl commercials and ask students to consider the appeals and strategies each commercial employs to advertise the product: 

Amazon Alexa:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D6Brirt4mvk Mercedes-Benz:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sgF4jj2FGlw Google: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXfJc8up6cM

The teacher should engage students in a class discussion of the appeals and strategies used in each commercial. For example, the teacher could ask questions such as: What do you notice about how this commercial appeals to an audience? Who might the intended audience be? How would you compare and contrast the appeals and strategies employed in each commercial? Which commercial is most effective and why?

3. Rhetorical Appeals: Logos, Ethos, and Pathos (5–10 mins.)

Following this commercial activity, the teacher should ask students to assess their prior knowledge of rhetorical appeals (logos, ethos, and pathos). In pairs, students could brainstorm what each term might mean and draw on their prior learning and associations with each term.

Then, the teacher should lead the class in collaboratively constructing definitions and examples of each term. The teacher could explain the etymology and root forms of each word (for instance, logos relates to logic, ethos relates to the ethical character of the author or speaker, and pathos relates to the word pathetic  and deals with emotion). In connecting this activity to the previous one, the teacher could ask students to generate examples of the rhetorical appeals present in the Super Bowl commercials. The teacher could also show different versions of the rhetorical triangle with students.

4. Small Group and Whole Class Discussion of Mike Bunn’s Essay “How to Read like a Writer” (15–20 mins.)

The class should then transition into a discussion of Mike Bunn’s essay “How to Read like a Writer” ( wac.colostate.edu/docs/books/writingspaces2/bunn–how-to-read.pdf ), which shares an approach to reading with a careful attention to the construction of a text. Students should form small groups of 2–3 members each to discuss the following questions, with attention to the elements of the text and context. 

  • Who is the author and what is his background on the topic?
  • Which audience does this essay address?
  • What larger conversations or debate does this essay address?
  • What arguments does Bunn convey? How does he develop the arguments?
  • What types of evidence does Bunn incorporate?
  • Identify rhetorical appeals to logos, ethos, and pathos.
  • In what style does Bunn write the essay? What is the effect?

The teacher could circulate around the classroom, listen in on conversations, and offer help as needed. Following the small group discussion, the teacher should ask groups to share their observations with the class.

Possible Follow-Up Activities

As a way to connect rhetorical appeals and text or context concepts to other readings, the teacher could ask students to identify rhetorical appeals and elements of the text and context in future assigned essays and articles. In the class that I taught, this lesson was the introduction to the rhetorical analysis unit; each lesson supported students in writing rhetorical analysis essays that analyze the appeals in a text of their choice. Scaffolding activities for essay writing could include thesis-statement drafting, essay outlining, peer-review workshopping, and revising and editing.

Possible Alterations

Having taught English at both the secondary and postsecondary levels, I have noticed that while AP English classes tend to focus on the analysis of individual rhetorical appeals and literary devices, first-year college writing classes place greater emphasis on the larger context of a piece, including the rhetorical situation and the debate or conversation to which an argument responds and contributes. When you are considering these differences in emphasis, introducing students to the elements of the text’s larger context and to possible connections between the text and contexts could offer one way to bridge high school and college writing pedagogies .

In addition, while teaching this lesson, I introduced the class to the concept of discourse communities and asked students to choose a text to analyze that addresses an audience in a particular discourse community they are familiar with or interested in studying. To help make this concept more accessible to students, I incorporated a journaling activity that asked them to consider the communities to which they belong: “What is a community, group, or organization that you are a part of at school or at home? How do the members of this community communicate with each other through writing or speaking or both?” I also engaged students in a mapping activity (provided below) in which they brainstormed examples of the different discourse communities to which they belong, including academic, extracurricular, and personal communities.

Lesson Materials

Discourse Communities Mapping Activity

Join the Conversation

We invite you to comment on this post and exchange ideas with other site visitors. Comments are moderated and subject to terms of service.

If you have a question for the MLA's editors, submit it to Ask the MLA!

Your e-mail address will not be published

Home

  • Title Index
  • Blogging Pedagogy

Search Site

You are here, rhetorical analysis, bridging summary and analysis with standup clips.

Aziz Ansari Comedy Poster

This assignment uses clips from standup comedy specials to hone student skills of summary and synethesis, for the controversy map essay assignment.

  • Read more about Bridging Summary and Analysis with Standup Clips
  • Log in to post comments

Enthy/memes: Making Memes to Teach Logos

rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

To pratice creating and breaking down enthymemes, I had students create memes (about anything), break down the stated and unstated premises and ultimately, come to a conclusion as to the meme's argument.

  • Read more about Enthy/memes: Making Memes to Teach Logos

Introducing Rhetorical Analysis with the 1491s

The 1491s Logo

This lesson plan uses the 1491s' youtube videos "I'm an Indian Too" and "Lincoln Was a Douche" to introduce students to rhetorical analysis.

  • Read more about Introducing Rhetorical Analysis with the 1491s

Introducing Rhetorical Analysis with Contemporary Advertisements

rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

The aim of this lesson is to provide students with an accessible and engaging introduction to rhetorical analysis. Students will view four brief texts—three thirty-second videos and one print advertisement—and try to identify the audience, the speaker, and the argument contained in each.

  • Read more about Introducing Rhetorical Analysis with Contemporary Advertisements

Annotation and Analysis with Genius.com (Formerly Rapgenius)

A page from Rapgenius, now called Genius, that includes an excerpt from Junot Diaz's Drown annotated by my students and a portrait of the author.

This lesson plan builds on Andrew Uzendoski's lesson  on teaching close reading using Rap Genius (now called Genius), focusing on teaching students the process of annotation, as well as how to articulate the building blocks of

  • Read more about Annotation and Analysis with Genius.com (Formerly Rapgenius)

Advertising Agency

Agency

Help your students realize when they're being advertised to by helping them turn the tables on the Don Drapers of the Internet.

  • Read more about Advertising Agency

Teaching Credibility with Twitter

rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

Introducing the concept of credibility by analyzing tweets.

  • Read more about Teaching Credibility with Twitter

Villains versus Villains: Writing Persuasive Dramatic Monologues

rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

Students work in groups to compose persuasive, dramatic monologues from the perspectives of famous, fictional villains.

  • Read more about Villains versus Villains: Writing Persuasive Dramatic Monologues

Using Flag Burning to Teach Icons, Symbols, and Speech Acts

Using Flag Burning to Teach Icons, Symbols, and Speech Acts

Students come to class having read read an analysis focused upon the importance of the seemingly minor distinctions between "icons" and "symbols" in the context of Texas v Johnson, the definitive Supreme Court case regarding the extent to which an American flag and/or the burning thereof is “speech,” and therefore protected by the First Amendment.

  • Read more about Using Flag Burning to Teach Icons, Symbols, and Speech Acts

Ethos and Online Dating 2.0 - Incorporating Visuals

Dating show from Mallrats movie

A remix of a previous lesson plan, this exercise asks students to analyze the ethos of an online dating profile and then pair it with an appropriate image - drawing on the relationship between written and visual rhetoric.

  • Read more about Ethos and Online Dating 2.0 - Incorporating Visuals

Rhetorical Analysis of "Sugar Dating" Ads and Audience(s)

Sugar Dating Sites Unabashedly Target Cash-Strapped Female Students

Students work on argumentation techniques, rhetorical fallacies, and other concepts via reading a heavily-biased article from the New York Post  discussing the relatively new but quickly growing phenomenon known as "sugar dating," which consists of web sites that pair older men (sugar daddies) who are willin

  • Read more about Rhetorical Analysis of "Sugar Dating" Ads and Audience(s)

Teaching Ethos with Selfies

A selfie photo. Text superimposed: professional? Insightful? Outrageous? Horribly Misguided?

Students will be asked to think critically about the argumentative weight a visual picture of the author adds to a position. For homework, students will be instructed to construct a persona, capture it with a "selfie," and turn it in to the instructor.

  • Read more about Teaching Ethos with Selfies

Using Debates to Teach Rhetorical Analysis

Two debaters at podiums smile at one another

This assignment asks students to watch a debate and evaluate the participants' use of ethos, pathos and logos given their goals and their audience.

  • Read more about Using Debates to Teach Rhetorical Analysis

Using Google Drive for Collaborative Bias Analysis

rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

In this exercise, students research potential sources of bias within a set of assigned texts and add their notes to a Google Drive spreadsheet. The students and instructor then review the spreadsheet as a group and finish with a class discussion.

  • Read more about Using Google Drive for Collaborative Bias Analysis

Teaching Context with Album Covers

Image of the Talking Heads album cover for "Remain in the Light"

This lesson plan uses album covers and music to help students (1) utilize vocabulary and (2) consider the importance of context in rhetorical analysis.

  • Read more about Teaching Context with Album Covers

"Creating" Visual Rhetoric Through Student-Designed Flash Games

rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

This assignment gives students a chance to make their own (very elementary) argumentative, flash game. By actively engaging in the process of game design, students will have to think through their intentions and the process of piecing together visual, aural, and verbal rhetoric.

  • Read more about "Creating" Visual Rhetoric Through Student-Designed Flash Games

Shifting Focus from Content to Medium

an illustration of a tv with "the message" written on the screen.

Using various records of the Hindenburg disaster, this assignment encourages students to engage with medium over content, especially in terms of literary studies.  

  • Read more about Shifting Focus from Content to Medium

Evaluating Satire With Rhetorical Analysis

Satirical image of eighteenth-century women in over-large bonnets

This assignment asks students to locate a product ad on their computers, and evaluate its use of ethos, pathos, and logos given its goal and target audience.

  • Read more about Evaluating Satire With Rhetorical Analysis

Flash Games and Visual Rhetoric

Image of Pokemon characters re-designed by Peta for its Flash game

This assignment pushes students to recognize the layers of rhetoric and propaganda embedded in something as visual and auditory as a flash game.

  • Read more about Flash Games and Visual Rhetoric

Subscribe to RSS - Rhetorical Analysis

  • Recent content
  • Popular content
  • Top content (Fivestar)

Today's popular content

  • Generating Consensus on Textual Interpretation Through Circulating Critique
  • Digital/Physical Library Scavenger Hunt
  • Speed Dating with Thesis Statements
  • Translating an Essay Into an Infographic
  • Teaching Ethos Using Online Dating Profiles
  • Color-coding Revision - Visualizing the Process

Creative Commons License

All materials posted to this site are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License .  We invite you to use and remix these materials, but please give credit where credit is due. In addition, we encourage you to comment on your experiments with and adaptations of these plans so that others may benefit from your experiences.

IMAGES

  1. Learn How to Write a Rhetorical Analysis Essay on Trust My Paper

    rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

  2. How to Write a Rhetorical Analysis Essay: Step by Step Guide

    rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

  3. How to Write a Rhetorical Analysis Essay: Outline, Steps, & Examples

    rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

  4. Rhetorical Analysis Essay Help: How To Write Rhetorical Analysis Essay

    rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

  5. A Modest Proposal Lesson Plan Rhetorical Analysis Examples Short

    rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

  6. How to Write a Rhetorical Analysis: A Step-by-Step Guide

    rhetorical analysis essay lesson plan

VIDEO

  1. Lesson 1 || Rhetorical Synthesis || Digital SAT Reading & Writing ||

  2. Rhetorical Analysis Essay Outlines

  3. Rhetorical analysis summative

  4. Rhetorical Analysis steps

  5. Rhetorical analysis project

  6. How to Annotate + Plan a Rhetorical Analysis Essay