Let’s talk about persuasion. It is easy to forget that this is what rhetoric is all about. Since the beginning of humans and language, we have been attempting to persuade each other in one way or another. We see it in politics and ad campaigns. We also see it everyday conversation and life. It is everywhere and you should be aware of how you are being persuaded. Traditionally, all persuasion falls into three categories: logos, ethos, and pathos. Let’s take a look at what each of these old Greek concepts mean.
Month: March 2020
Studyblr: Where Social Media and Writing Tutoring Could Meet
Previously, Zackary covered misperceptions about writing centers and the work they do. This post continues to address those misperceptions by previewing one creative way a person with instruction in writing pedagogy can exercise what they know beyond–but not much further than–the college institution.
Writing Centers: Perception V.S. Reality
Writing Centers: Perception V.S. Reality
Written by Zackary Boos
I began my journey in the world of writing centers early last year in January of 2019. Not as a tutor, but as a student learning to become one. I came in with many of the typical wrong ideas, expecting to showoff skills in correcting grammar. Over the course of that chilly spring semester, I learned the reality of today’s writing centers, and today I’ve nearly completed my first year of working at St. Cloud State University’s Write Place. Increasingly, writing centers are becoming more of an integral feature to American colleges and universities. Through many different structural and ideological changes, writing centers have become perceived as remedial learning facilities for students, for lacking in skill, and even as a copy-editing service. Read on to learn truth of today’s writing centers.