Sunday, August 18, 2019
Using Music to Teach Ethos :: Personal Narrative Teaching Essays
Using Music to Teach Ethos      Introduction                After teaching high school English reading and writing for four years, life led me to apply for a position teaching English at a state university.  I was hired as an adjunct faculty member, but in my eyes, I was basically a utility man in the Major Leagues.  The brief hour-long meeting with the adjunct coordinator was my first exposure to rhetoric and anything related to it.  I knew what a rhetorical question wasââ¬âdonââ¬â¢t we all?ââ¬âand I had heard people make comments such as ââ¬Å"He might think he knows what heââ¬â¢s doing, but in all reality, his talk is all rhetoric.â⬠  Still, did I know how to teach this stuff to other people?  On the college level?  I sat down with the information the coordinator had given me and I found many helpful hints, ideas, and terms.  I love terms.  If I am given a list of terms, I can often use the definitions to find the common links and make the material teachable.  I did an online search and found a Web site that    broke down the various elements of rhetoric and included a list of terms.  I was in heaven, rhetorically speaking.                This first exposure to rhetoric was, I must admit, dull and dreary, much like Latin seemed to be where I used to teach.  Dead languages, dead conceptsââ¬âwere the Ancient cultures good for anything other than art, stories, language, and great food?  I decided that this seemingly dry material would have to be souped up a bit to attract college freshmen whose attention spans run between 10 and 15 minutes.  Then, as Red Skelton might say, I had an apostrophe.  I realized that the compositions my students write are comprised of sections, each an entity unto itself which contributes something to the overall essay.  I remembered my senior year at UGA, taking ââ¬Å"History and Analysis of Rock and Roll Music,â⬠ and the lessons we learned about the different sections of a song and how those sections are merged to create one complete unit.  After reading a bit more about rhetorical appealsââ¬âethical, logical, and emotionalââ¬âI realized that the songs we listen    to every day can be linked to this previously unknown, dry material.  					    
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