Censorship, Truth & Happiness in Fahrenheit 451

Lesson 2
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ELA

Unit 7

10th Grade

Lesson 2 of 20

Objective


Identify and analyze the rhetorical situation in “Why We Published The 1619 Project.”

Readings and Materials


  • Article: “Why We Published the 1619 Project” by Jake Silverstein 

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Target Task


Writing Prompt

How does Jake Silverstein use rhetorical strategies to convince his audience of the necessity of The 1619 Project?

Sample Response

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Key Thinking


Annotation Focus

What is the rhetorical situation? In other words, what lines in the text reveal the rhetorical situation including the exigence, purpose, audience, and context?

Scaffolding Questions

Who is the intended audience in this essay? How do you know? 

According to Silverstein, what is the significance of the year 1619? Why does Silverstein begin this essay juxtaposing the years 1619 and 1776? 

What does Silverstein describe as the purpose of The 1619 Project

Explain the structure of The 1619 Project as a collection of essays. 

What does Silverstein warn readers about? What does this warning suggests about the central ideas of The 1619 Project?

Trace the use of “we” throughout the essay. Is the “we” in the first paragraph the same “we” in the last two paragraphs? How do you know? 

Discourse Questions

What are the audience’s needs, values, and beliefs in "Why We Published the 1619 Project"?

Homework


  • Read and annotate “Why We Can’t Teach Slavery Right in American Schools.”
    • Annotation Focus: In what ways are American schools/textbooks failing students?

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Standards


  • LO 1.2B — Explain how the rhetorical features of an argument contribute to its effect and meaning.
  • RI.9-10.6 — Determine an author's point of view or purpose in a text and analyze how an author uses rhetoric to advance that point of view or purpose.

Supporting Standards

LO 1.2A
LO 1.4A
LO 2.3A
LO 5.1A
LO 5.1B
RI.9-10.1
RI.9-10.2
SL.9-10.1
W.9-10.2.a

Next

Analyze how Stewart uses anecdotes and allusions to develop her argument about the teaching of slavery in American schools. 

Lesson 3
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