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14 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
situation in which language can be used to solve a situation; ability to communicate need
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rhetorical situation
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the urgancy, the situation that demands your response. Example: child dies in an accident, so mom starts mothers against drunk driving
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exigence
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anyone affected by occurence or anyone that can affect change
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audience
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adaptations. adapt language, how to dress for the situation. speaking to friends as opposed to speaking to board of execs.
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constraints
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reason for the speech
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occasion: includes special events, academic courses, professional meetings, and civic/community meetings
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to question things. ability to distinguish fact from opinion, identify the underlying
assumptions or premises on which a speaker’s argument rests, evaluate the soundness of the arguments and reasoning employed in persuading, assess the credibility of sources in evaluating testimony, and separate reasoned arguments from emotional appeals. |
critical thinking.
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active involvement in community
life and social issues |
civic engagement
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activity of speaking
or writing to civic audiences in arguing for policies aimed at addressing these issues. |
public advocacy
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ethos, pathos, and logos
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aristotelian thinking
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logic; appeals
to our thinking, reasoning, and inference-making capabilities. |
logos
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empathy, sympathy
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pathos
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the audience's perception of you; credibility
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ethos
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asks the audience to believe or do something
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persuasion
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incentive to do something that requires time and effort
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motivation
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