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9.1.16: Twelve Angry Men- Module 11- Peer Reviews (Rhetorical Analysis)

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    248474
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    Module 11

     

    Peer Reviews # 2

     

    SLO’s: Engage in a reflective process of evaluating their own drafts and those of others.

     

    Revise work to enhance coherence and clarity while communicating with relevant discourse communities

     

    Students will engage in peer reviews for the rough draft of their Rhetorical Analysis essay

     

    Students will be paired up, swap essays, and read each other’s essays to each other respectively. 

     

    They will then fill out peer review sheets for each other.

     

    https://docs.google.com/document/d/1M3LNvSMleQm_R2D5XKz4u9FqBDbjN9b1EOudMbk0dGU/edit?usp=sharing


     

    ENG 101

    Truman College Writer:______________________________

    Fall Semester 2024 Reviewer:___________________________

    Workshop: Essay #2: Rhetorical Analysis


     

    Please read through your peer’s essay and answer the following:

    1. Comment on the author’s introduction.  Does it grab your attention?  Does the writer set up enough context for the paper? Do they clearly define ethos, pathos, and logos?  What kind of background information did they share? Suggestions? 





     

    1. Comment on the writer’s thesis statement.  Is it clear and specific enough?  Is it arguable or a statement of fact?  Suggestions?





     

    1. Comment on the writer’s use of textual evidence from the film and outside source to support their thesis and points throughout.  Do they use enough evidence? Are there places where you think there could be more? Explain.





     

    1. Comment on the organization of the draft.  Does one paragraph flow smoothly into the next?  Suggestions?





     

    1. Comment on the writer’s transitions between paragraphs and their incorporation of textual evidence in the draft.  Do they link ideas between paragraphs? Do they smoothly incorporate quotes?   If not, indicate where you think revision would help?








     

    1. What examples does the writer use for ethos, pathos, and logos, respectively? What example not mentioned would you suggest?






     

    1.   Comment on the strengths and weaknesses of the argument as a whole.  Do you as a reader feel like the writer and clearly supported, explained, and proved their thesis through use of evidence, analysis, and explanation?





     


    9.1.16: Twelve Angry Men- Module 11- Peer Reviews (Rhetorical Analysis) is shared under a CC BY-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.