Rhetorical Devices

Grade 7 Reading | FL B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.7.R.3.1

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What Will You Learn?

Rhetoric is the art of persuasion - how writers and speakers use language to convince their audience. Authors use different appeals (ways to connect with readers) and techniques (specific language strategies) to achieve their purpose. Today you'll learn to recognize these tools and analyze HOW they work.

The Three Rhetorical Appeals

Almost all persuasive writing uses a combination of these three appeals:

ETHOS

Appeal to Credibility

"Trust me because I'm qualified"

"As a pediatrician with 20 years of experience, I've seen the benefits of vaccination firsthand."

PATHOS

Appeal to Emotion

"Feel this with me"

"Imagine a child's face lighting up when they receive their first book - you can make that happen."

LOGOS

Appeal to Logic

"The evidence proves it"

"Studies show that reading for just 20 minutes a day exposes students to 1.8 million words per year."

Remember: Most effective persuasion blends ALL THREE appeals. Authors choose which to emphasize based on their audience and purpose.

Key Rhetorical Techniques

Repetition

What it is: Repeating words or phrases for emphasis

Why it works: Makes ideas memorable; creates rhythm; emphasizes importance

Example: "We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields..." - Winston Churchill

Parallelism

What it is: Using similar grammatical structure for related ideas

Why it works: Creates rhythm; makes ideas feel balanced and connected; easier to remember

Example: "Ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country." - JFK

Rhetorical Question

What it is: A question asked for effect, not to get an answer

Why it works: Makes readers think; implies an obvious answer; engages the audience

Example: "If not us, who? If not now, when?" - The answer is obvious: US and NOW.

Example: Analyzing a Persuasive Speech

As your student council president for two years, I've seen firsthand how our school can improve. And I'm here today to tell you: we need longer lunch periods.

Picture this: you're rushing through your meal, barely tasting the food, anxiously watching the clock. Your stomach is in knots. Your friends are mid-sentence when the bell cuts them off. Is this really how we want to spend our break?

The evidence supports change. Research from the American Academy of Pediatrics shows that students with adequate lunch time have better focus in afternoon classes. A study of 150 schools found that extending lunch by just 10 minutes reduced behavioral problems by 27%.

We deserve better. We deserve time. We deserve change.

Breaking Down the Example

Element Type How It Advances the Purpose
"As your student council president for two years..." Ethos Establishes credibility - the speaker has experience and authority
"Picture this: you're rushing... stomach in knots..." Pathos Makes audience FEEL the problem emotionally - creates sympathy
"Research from... 27% reduction..." Logos Provides facts and statistics that prove the argument logically
"Is this really how we want to spend our break?" Rhetorical Question Implies the obvious answer (no!) and engages audience thinking
"We deserve better. We deserve time. We deserve change." Repetition + Parallelism Creates powerful rhythm; emphasizes what students deserve; memorable ending

Your Turn!

1. Identify the appeal: "According to NASA scientists, climate change is causing sea levels to rise at 3.3 millimeters per year."
2. Identify the appeal: "Imagine explaining to your grandchildren why we didn't act when we had the chance."
3. What technique is used? "I have a dream... I have a dream... I have a dream..."
4. In the lunch speech example, WHY does the author use statistics from research studies? (Don't just say "logos" - explain the PURPOSE)
5. How does ending with "We deserve better. We deserve time. We deserve change." create a persuasive effect?

Key Questions for Analyzing Rhetoric

FAST Tip: The test doesn't just ask you to identify techniques - it asks you to analyze HOW they help the author achieve their purpose. Always connect technique to effect!