II. Students Will Demonstrate Ability to Read and Think Critically About Texts
A. Profile texts and determine potential biases.B. Comprehend the content and intention of texts.
- Identify approximate demographics for ideal audience of individual articles, journals, books, and student essays.
- Determine biases or viewpoints appealed to through analysis of the vocabulary, support, and organization of a text.
C. Evaluate the biases and reliability of sources.
- Summarize an article's content effectively.
- Describe the author's intention or agenda.
- Identify language that reveals a bias.
- Distinguish and identify arguments based in logos, pathos and ethos.
- Locate logical fallacies in student and professional texts independently.
- Recognize personal and cultural biases that influence readers.
The papers I saw today had less summary and more quotes - ties to the text to analyze - than earlier semester's rough drafts. We've evidently done a better job talking about that. Additionally, I'd like to stress and iterate or reiterate that
- A works cited section or page will be needed. The article MUST be cited end-text.
- A thesis statement mentioning the article summarized by name will be needed in the first paragraph.
- Read creatively - don't merely translate the metaphor into literal language. Find a theme, bias or cultural slant.
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