Eng1CEssay2RhetoricalAnalysis-1 xRhetoricalAnalysisRubric x
Authors: Wendy Haight, PhD; Erin Sugrue, MSW, MPP, LICSW; Molly Calhoun, MSW; James Black, MD, PhD; and Ruth Soffer- Elnekave, MSW
Published: May 2017, Updated August 2018
This series introduces viewers to the concept of moral injury, discuss the relevance of moral injury among parents involved in CPS, discusses the importance of retention of professionals in child welfare, and implications for policy and practice.
Please answer the following questions:
- Write a response with 3 takeaways for child welfare practice as it is related to moral injury (Comp 1)
- Note any aspect of diversity for the modules. (Comp 2)
- Articulate areas of advocacy. (Comp 3)
- Download the moral injury fact sheet for your records
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Traumatic Stress Screening for Child Welfare Professionals Module Series (1.0 hr)
https://cascw.umn.edu/portfolio-items/traumatic-stress-screening-for-child-welfare-professionals-module-series/
Authors: Sophia Frank, MA, Katelyn Donisch, MA, Chris Bray, Ph.D, and Abigail Gewirtz, Ph.D Date Published: August 2016
Module 1 provides you with a general overview of the tool and the background, development, and evidence supporting the Traumatic Stress Screening for Child Welfare Professionals. Module 2 will break down administration of the TSSCA step-by-step with video demonstrations. Module 2 will also introduce you to several practitioners who have used the screen in their practice. Lastly, Module 3 will provide next steps for after you have completed the Screen with a client.
Please answer the following questions:
- Highlights the importance a proper assessment
- Review the tools used in the module and articulate your understanding.
- Articulate your takeaways from this module.
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Trauma-Informed Social Work Practice: Practice Considerations and Challenges by: Carolyn Knight
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s10615-014-0481-6
- Articulate your understanding of trauma-informed practice
- Review how incorporating the most recent theoretical and empirical literature assist when working with clients who have experienced trauma.
- Articulate what new information you have gained from reading the above article.
Eng. 1C—Essay # 2 Rhetorical Analysis– Essay# 2 (2-3 pages)
The objective of the essay is to closely analyze the rhetorical strategies used in one of the readings of your textbook, Practical Argument. Choose ONE of following articles for a Rhetorical Analysis. The articles are culled from the first four chapters, but if you wish to analyze another article, you are welcome to do so if it is in the textbook, Practical Argument. You must however let me know which article you plan to analyze if it is not one of these below:
Choose ONE of the articles for analysis:
Ellen Ruppel Shell. “College May Not Be Worth It Anymore” (Pgs. 33-35)
Marty Nemko. “We send too many students to College” (Pgs. 36-39)
Jennie Le. “What does it mean to be a College Grad?” (Pgs. 40-41)
Bryan Caplan. “The World Might be better off Without College for Everyone.” (Pgs. 42-47)
Mary C Daly and Leila Bengali. “Is it Still Worth Going to College.” (Pgs.48-53)
John Tierney. “The Reign of Recycling.” (Pgs. 66-70)
Bob Holmes. “Waste Not…?” (Pgs. 76-80)
Jenny Luna. “We Are So Forked.” (Pgs.80-82)
Rajiv Ravisankar. “Sweetshop Oppression” (Pgs. 121-123)
Jerome Seiger. “Sweatshops Are Good.” (Pgs. 124 –125)
Structure of the paper:
1. Introduction: Introduce the article and articulate the thesis of the article. End the introduction with an assessment of the effectiveness of the argument. The effectiveness of the argument should be based on rhetorical strategies employed by the writer(s) of the article. This will be your thesis for the Rhetorical Analysis.
Example of the last line of the introduction: Mary Daly and Leila Bengali in “Is it Still Worth Going to College” present an effective argument for the value of a financial investment towards a college degree as their evidence and reasoning is largely drawn from recent research in the field.
2. Body Paragraphs: This will be an analysis of the Rhetorical situation and Rhetorical Strategies Used. (Tip: Consult the PowerPoint of Chapter 4 to get to understand both Rhetorical Situation and Rhetorical Strategies). You may use some or all the criteria that apply to your article. You may also begin the first body paragraph with a summary of the article.
a. Rhetorical Situation: Analyze the Writer’s background, the Writer’s purpose, and the Writer’s audience. Support with textual evidence from the article
b. Rhetorical Triangle: Consider the means of persuasion: Logos, Pathos and Ethos. Decide what weightage is given to each in your chosen article. Support with textual evidence from the article
c. Rhetorical Strategies: Analyze the thesis, the organization, the evidence, and the stylistic techniques of the writer. Support with textual evidence from the article
3. Conclusion: Conclude with a final assessment of the effectiveness of the argument of your article and provide your reasoning for the assessment. You should examine both the strengths and the weaknesses and decide whether you find the argument effective or not. This assessment should support the thesis of your paper.
Further Guidelines:
1. Outline your article when preparing for the essay as that will give you a good idea of the thesis and evidence of the article.
2. Be 2-3 pages long and formatted according to MLA guidelines.
3. Your thesis should assess the effectiveness of the argument based on some elements of the texts’ rhetorical strategies (how the argument is put together)
4. Introduce the text properly and summarize the text’s argument clearly and concisely.
5. Use quotations as evidence of your thesis and where appropriate in the summary.
6. Explain how the rhetorical strategies work (how they are meant to impact the reader)
7. Explain how the rhetorical strategies support the text’s overall argument.
8. Incorporate quotations properly and use in-text citations for them as needed.
9. Use signal phrases to attribute ideas to the original author.
10. Be written effectively and coherently, with few punctuations or grammatical errors.
Due Dates:
1st draft —— Wednesday July 7
2nd draft — Sunday July 10
Peer editing on Canvas Monday July 11
Final essay –Wednesday July 13
Rhetorical Analysis Rubric –English 1 C
Criteria |
5 (Excellent) |
4 (Good) |
3 (Adequate) |
2 (Emerging) |
1 (Needs Work) |
Introduction/Thesis Conclusion |
Well-developed introductory paragraph contains background and a clear explanation of the source article’s thesis that is to be analyzed. The name of the source article is mentioned along with the name of the author. There is a smooth lead-into the thesis. The thesis statement establishes a clear stand on whether the argument is effective or ineffective. The thesis also indicates a broad reasoning for its effectiveness. Conclusion emphasizes the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of the argument with additional reasoning. |
Introductory paragraph contains some background information and states the source article’s thesis to be analyzed but lacks adequate detail. There is a relatively smooth transition to the thesis. The thesis indicates whether the argument is effective or ineffective but may not provide a broad reasoning; Conclusion emphasizes the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of the argument with additional reasoning. |
Introduction states a clear thesis but does not adequately explain the background of the source article. The transition to the thesis is not smooth. Conclusion summarizes main topics but is repetitive. No additional reasoning is provided |
Thesis and/or problem is vague or unclear on whether the argument of the source article is effective. The transition into the thesis is a seemingly random collection of information, unclear, or not related to the source article. Conclusion does not adequately summarize the main points. No suggestions for change or opinions are included. |
The thesis is missing or is a statement of fact which is not debatable. The thesis has no relation to the source article to be analyzed. Conclusion is unclear and/or missing the main points; No suggestions for change or opinions are included. |
Development-Body Paragraphs/Evidence |
Three or more main points are well developed with supporting details. The evidence draws from research which is credible. The evidence is compelling. Student meets guidelines of the assignment in terms of page numbers and other stipulated requirements such as number of required sources. |
Three or more main points are present but may lack detail and development in one or two. The evidence is present but not compelling. Student meets guidelines of the assignment in terms of page numbers and other stipulated requirements such as number of required sources; Sources are credible. |
Three or more main points, but all lack development. There is insufficient evidence. Student tends to repeat arguments; Student does not meet guidelines in terms of page numbers and other stipulated requirements such as number of required sources; Some of the sources may not be credible |
Less than three main points, with poor development of ideas; The is a noticeable lack of evidence in the paper. Student does not meet guidelines in terms of page numbers and other stipulated requirements such as number of required sources; The sources are insufficient and/or not credible. |
The paper has only one body paragraph. There is a noticeable lack of evidence Student has not submitted more than 1-2 pages. There are no sources present. There are no appeals present |
Rhetorical Triangle and Appeals |
Source text is thoroughly and effectively. contextualized with well-supported. analysis of structure, rhetorical triangle (Audience, author, purpose), and rhetorical appeals (ethos, pathos, logos); focus is on analysis (not summary or author’s own ideas of the issue); |
Contextualization and analysis of source text is good and somewhat. supported but could be improved. focus is mostly on analysis (not summary or author’s own ideas of the issue) |
Incomplete contextualization and analysis of source text; parts of rhetorical triangle or appeals may be missing; little support is. provided, overuse of summary. use of discussion about the issue. instead of analysis |
Poor contextualization and analysis of source text; not supported by examples, overuse. of summary and discussion about the issue (not the analysis) |
Analysis of source text missing. Overuse of summary/ |
Organization |
Logical, compelling progression of ideas in essay; clear structure which enhances and showcases the central idea or theme and moves the reader through the text. Organization flows so smoothly the reader hardly thinks about it. Effective, mature, graceful transitions exist throughout the essay. |
Overall, the paper is logically developed. Progression of ideas in essay makes sense and moves the reader easily through the text. Transitions are present but could be smoother. |
Progression of ideas in essay is awkward yet moves the reader through the text without too much confusion. The writer sometimes lunges ahead too quickly or spends too much time on details that do not matter. Transitions appear sporadically, but not equally throughout the essay |
Arrangement of essay is unclear and illogical. The writing lacks a clear sense of direction. Ideas, details, or events seem strung together in a loose or random fashion; there is no identifiable internal structure and readers have trouble following the writer’s line of thought. Few forced transitions in the essay or no transitions are present. |
Paragraphs are unconnected. There is no direction in the paper. There are no transitions present. |
Grammar/Mechanics |
Sentence structure is correct. Punctuation and capitalization are correct. There are no run-ons/comma splices or fragments. Paper is virtually error-free. |
Sentence structure is generally correct. Some awkward sentences do appear. There are one or two errors in punctuation and/or capitalization. There may be one or two errors regarding run-ons/comma splices or fragments |
Work contains structural weaknesses and grammatical errors. There are three or four errors in punctuation and/or capitalization. There are further errors regarding run-ons/comma splices and/or fragments. However, essay is still readable despite multiple errors in grammar. |
Work contains multiple incorrect sentence structures. There are four or more errors in punctuation and/or capitalization; Paper is challenging to understand because of grammar errors |
Grammar errors are multiple and interfere with understanding the paper; It is possible to mis-read the paper because of errors in grammar and mechanics |
MLA documentation |
Source material is smoothly integrated into the text. All sources are accurately documented in the MLA format both in the text and on the Works Cited page. The paper is accurately formatted in MLA style. There are no errors. |
Source material is used. All sources are accurately documented, but a few are not in the desired format. The paper has minor errors in formatting MLA style |
Source material is used, but integration may be awkward. All sources are accurately documented, but many are not in the MLA format; The paper has noticeable errors in MLA formatting. |
Sources are not accurately documented. There may be no Works Cited page. MLA formatting is incorrect through most of the paper. |
There is no Works Cited page or in-text citation; There is no attempt at formatting the paper on MLA guidelines |