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Adrian Neibauer's avatar

I’m currently using the TQE Method to teach my students how to read and analyze text.

https://open.substack.com/pub/adrianneibauer/p/the-power-of-the-short-story?r=gtvg8&utm_medium=ios

For writing, I’ve adapted the work of John Warner, giving my students more opportunities to think on paper.

https://adrianneibauer.substack.com/p/changing-the-way-i-teach-writing?r=gtvg8

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Matt's avatar

I like the idea of moving rhetorical analysis away from a formal "paper" structure and having the process broken down in smaller writing exercises. I have had similar feelings about my own rhetorical analysis paper assignment being inauthentic, and this is how I will be handling it this year:

1. I have found that doing group exercises using advertisements in class is a fun and less tedious way to practice analytical skills--students can still get feedback from me and each other, but I'm not sitting at my computer for hours doing that. I feel like they are still learning how the process works this way.

2. I am also thinking about making rhetorical analysis a part of the peer review process when students evaluate each others' writing. This way, they are practicing this skill in a meaningful context, but it's not necessarily something I have to "grade" and respond to.

3. I am a fan of John Warner's writing assignments in his book The Writer's Practice. He has several different analytical writing assignments which feel a bit more genuine and interesting than the typical rhetorical analysis paper. One asks students to analyze a commercial and identify the subtext, and another asks students to identify what makes a particular work of humor funny. While students still struggle with these projects, I think they make the activity feel less "academic" and more intrinsically motivating, especially if you let them pick the commercial and/or work of humor. I also think asking students to write a review of a movie, product, TV show, video game, etc. requires them to use analytical skills in a more real world context, and I give my students the option to do this as well.

Overall, your process sounds very useful and meaningful, though it also sounds like a lot of work! :-)

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