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Showing 1 to 15 of 22 results Save | Export
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El-Sharif, Ahmad – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2018
The current article approaches the issue of the persuasiveness of metaphors in The Prophet Muhammad's Tradition. The main concern of the article is to show that the Prophetic metaphors are discursively practiced by the Prophet for the function of persuading his audience to accept Islamic laws, and introduce rites and rituals, and to prohibit the…
Descriptors: Islam, Figurative Language, Audiences, Religious Factors
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Donovan, Carol; Coleman, Julianne – Science and Children, 2018
The language of science, which emphasizes reasoning about the causes and conditions of scientific phenomenon and use of visuals to convey information, can be difficult for young readers and writers without a lot of teacher scaffolding (Pappas and Varelas 2009). It is important that teachers understand these linguistic requirements to support…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Scientists
Akbas, Erdem; Hatipoglu, Çiler – Online Submission, 2018
It is now commonly accepted that academic discourses tend to provide venues for participants to interact where the producer needs to display an awareness of the audience, and metadiscourse (MD) is the set of tools enabling the involved parties to establish relationships. MD strategies allow writers to project themselves into their work, signal…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Audience Awareness, Cultural Differences
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Gregory Shafer – English Journal, 2013
It is important for students to understand and analyze political language so that they can be participatory members of a democratic society. This article stresses the importance of understanding and analyzing political language. The author claims that the mastery of such skills is what allows students to be participatory members of a democratic…
Descriptors: Political Issues, Language Usage, Jargon, Language Arts
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Heilker, Paul; Yergeau, Melanie – College English, 2011
Autism is a profoundly rhetorical phenomenon. And all--parents, educators, caregivers, policymakers, the public, and autistic people themselves--would be significantly empowered to understand and respond to it as such. In the continuing absence of stable scientific or medical knowledge about autism, one needs to shine a bright and insistent light…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Autism, Language Usage, English Instruction
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Zuidema, Leah A. – English Journal, 2011
The idea of joining a conversation through reading and writing is not new; in his 1941 book "The Philosophy of Literary Form: Studies in Symbolic Action," Kenneth Burke suggests that the acts of reading and writing are like entering a parlor where others are already conversing. The author explores the place of professional debate within NCTE and…
Descriptors: English, Discourse Communities, Persuasive Discourse, Debate
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Fredal, James – College English, 2011
The study of bullshit, what the author calls "taurascatics", has been making a splash of late. It was Harry Frankfurt who tossed the stone: his essay "On Bullshit" came out in "Raritan" in 1986, hit the "New York Times" best-seller list as a book in 1995, and has been adopted, adapted, and criticized across the academy since. The ripples spread…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Credibility, Rhetorical Theory, Rhetoric
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Thier, Marlene – Science and Children, 2010
This article examines the role of argument in the science classroom and how it can be used to help students develop science process skills (e.g., using evidence to defend a point of view) and literacy process skills (e.g., using language precisely to express a particular point of view and extending these understandings through the use of…
Descriptors: Science Process Skills, Persuasive Discourse, Science Instruction, Literacy
Cavanagh, Sean – Education Week, 2011
The rhetoric of education today tends to divide the world in two: between those who favor "reform" and those who don't. Many who consider themselves reformers say they stand in opposition to the "status quo." Some of them speak of the need to challenge the "education establishment," or the education bureaucracy. Many also describe their policies…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Philosophy, Rhetorical Criticism, Rhetoric
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Yeager, Joseph; Sommer, Linda – Qualitative Report, 2012
Language operates according to rules. Rules mean prediction. The application of these language rules to persuasive campaigns through linguistic technology can result in major gains in advertising, political and marketing outcomes. For qualitative researchers in communications, marketing and messaging, one area of persuasive language technology can…
Descriptors: Grammar, Prediction, Praxis, Marketing
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Parks, Amy Noelle – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2009
I adopt a poststructural perspective to argue that the current focus in mathematics education on measuring, reducing, and explaining the achievement gap is dangerous and can be counter-productive to the equity-oriented arguments that those mobilizing "gap" language want to make. The reiteration of the achievement gap in scholarly arguments can…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Equal Education, Achievement Gap, Academic Achievement
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Ross, Donna; Fisher, Douglas; Frey, Nancy – Science and Children, 2009
Argumentation in science involves offering and responding to claims, providing and asking for evidence or justifications, and analyzing those claims to formulate a decision (Gross 1990). The authors' experience with students, including those who are English learners, suggests that many young science students benefit from language frames to…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Language Usage, Persuasive Discourse, Syntax
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Seifried, Chad – Quest, 2008
Emotive language frequently appears in sporting contexts because it arouses feelings within its participants, listeners, and readers. The use of emotive language frequently provokes criticism because some people abuse emotive language to manipulate individuals, environments, and events. In addition, many individuals fail to understand how and when…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Athletics, Expressive Language, Language Usage
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Cohen, Lynn E. – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2009
This inquiry applied Bakhtin's dialogic process to the pretend play of preschool children using an interpretive approach. It used vignettes from videotaped data and Bakhtin's theories of dialogism and heteroglossia to provide an understanding of how children appropriate social roles and rules in pretend play and use a variety of "voices"…
Descriptors: Play, Persuasive Discourse, Social Influences, Preschool Children
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Allison, Nancy – Technical Communication: Journal of the Society for Technical Communication, 1995
Discusses "little nothings"--a paragraph that pretends to give information but only alludes to or implies needed action. Presents examples of little nothings in a marketing flier for a filter. Discusses the role of the technical writer in translating the little nothings into clear, readable text. Discusses ethical issues. (RS)
Descriptors: Ethics, Higher Education, Language Usage, Persuasive Discourse
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