Rhetorical Analysis Planning Sheet Order Description You will submit a Rhetorical Analysis Planning Sheet this week to the Dropbox for your professor to grade. The purpose of this assignment is to begin collecting information and putting it in writing as you prepare for the 3- to 4-page final Rhetorical Analysis you will submit in Week 4. First, read this week’s lecture in the 2nd edition of Writing Todayand begin Chapter 8 in your text. Then go to the search engine of your choice and search for a print advertisement to use as the subject of your Rhetorical Analysis. You will need to provide a URL for your chosen ad, so be sure it is available online. Your chosen ad can be current or vintage. If you would like to analyze an ad from a different time period, type the phrase “vintage ads” into your browser. Choose an ad that you can analyze based on its rhetorical appeals (reasoning, character, and emotion), and be sure the ad you choose is intriguing to you. Please make sure that your chosen ad is appropriate for classroom use and the workplace. I have attached a template for this task. Locate the file “Week 3 Rhetorical Analysis Planning Sheet template” in Doc Sharing. Use this template and follow the format provided to create your planning sheet this week. You’ll need to identify and describe the ad, draft a thesis, identify the use of rhetorical appeals, and draft a conclusion. At the end of your extended draft outline, copy and paste the URL or website address for your ad (it will begin with https://) so that your readers can also view the ad. Successful assignments will: identify an advertisement, current or vintage, that’s appropriate for a college-level audience; include a draft of the introduction and conclusion (minimum of one paragraph each); include a tentative thesis statement at the end of the introduction; include details to establish the visual description and context of the ad; identify the various ways rhetorical appeals are used; and be typed and submitted as a Microsoft Word 2010 document (.docx) using 12-point font.

Rhetorical Analysis Planning Sheet

Order Description

You will submit a Rhetorical Analysis Planning Sheet this week to the Dropbox for your professor to grade. The purpose of this assignment is to begin collecting information and putting it in writing as you prepare for the 3- to 4-page final Rhetorical Analysis you will submit in Week 4.

First, read this week’s lecture in the 2nd edition of Writing Todayand begin Chapter 8 in your text. Then go to the search engine of your choice and search for a print advertisement to use as the subject of your Rhetorical Analysis. You will need to provide a URL for your chosen ad, so be sure it is available online. Your chosen ad can be current or vintage. If you would like to analyze an ad from a different time period, type the phrase “vintage ads” into your browser.

Choose an ad that you can analyze based on its rhetorical appeals (reasoning, character, and emotion), and be sure the ad you choose is intriguing to you. Please make sure that your chosen ad is appropriate for classroom use and the workplace. I have attached a template for this task.

Locate the file “Week 3 Rhetorical Analysis Planning Sheet template” in Doc Sharing. Use this template and follow the format provided to create your planning sheet this week. You’ll need to identify and describe the ad, draft a thesis, identify the use of rhetorical appeals, and draft a conclusion.

At the end of your extended draft outline, copy and paste the URL or website address for your ad (it will begin with https://) so that your readers can also view the ad.

Successful assignments will:

identify an advertisement, current or vintage, that’s appropriate for a college-level audience;
include a draft of the introduction and conclusion (minimum of one paragraph each);
include a tentative thesis statement at the end of the introduction;
include details to establish the visual description and context of the ad;
identify the various ways rhetorical appeals are used; and
be typed and submitted as a Microsoft Word 2010 document (.docx) using 12-point font.

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