Unit 1 Test Review – Rhetorical Analysis
English II Pre-AP Unit 1
Test Date: Wednesday/Thursday, September 23/24, 2015

I. Texts Covered

  • John Hersey – Hiroshima
  • Harry Truman – Hiroshima Address
  • Carl Sagan – “On Nuclear Disarmament”
  • Elihu Root – Suffrage Address
  • Susan B. Anthony – “A Woman’s Right to Vote”

II. Test Format: Multiple choice, matching, cold reads – approximately 80-90 questions

III. Rhetorical Terms and Devices and Logical Fallacies

  • STUDY YOUR GOLD PACKET. You are responsible for knowing and being able to apply and analyze the following terms:

  • Rhetoric
  • Counterargument
  • Ethos
  • Pathos
  • Logos
  • Deductive Reasoning
  • Inductive Reasoning
  • Repetition
  • Amplification
  • Parallel Structure
  • Chiasmus
  • Antithesis
  • Anaphora
  • Epistrophe
  • Asyndeton
  • Polysyndeton
  • Rhetorical Question
  • Hypophora
  • Loose Sentence
  • Periodic Sentence
  • Balanced Sentence
  • Inverted Order

  • Know the following logical fallacies:

  • Ad populum
  • Slippery slope
  • False dilemma (Either/or fallacy)
  • Ad hominem
  • Oversimplification
  • Over-generalization
  • Hasty generalization
  • Stereotyping
  • Circular reasoning
  • Post hoc ergo propter hoc
  • Red herring
  • Non sequitur
  • Faulty analogy
  • Straw man

  • Given a sentence or passage, be able to identify any rhetorical devices or logical fallacies present in the passage.
  • Be able to address any rhetorical devices or logical fallacies in the texts that we studied in class.
  • Be able not only to identify devices, but to explain their effect.

IV. General Analysis – Texts from Class AND Cold Reads

  • ANYTHING we discussed and analyzed in class is applicable.
  • Be able to analyze and discuss rhetorical/structural elements (including organization of ideas) in each text.
  • Be able to answer questions about the writer/speaker’s purpose and how s/he achieves that purpose.
  • Be able to use the Big 5 and SOAPSTone to analyze texts. Know all elements of both SOAPSTone and the Big 5 for the texts which we studied in class.
  • Be able to make connections among texts in terms of contrasting messages and the way devices are used.
  • In the case of Hiroshima, be able to analyze what Hersey is essentially saying about the bombing, and be able to analyze and explain what he uses each of the six survivors to do.
  • The test will contain two (2) cold reads.

V. Grammar

  • Be able to complete all the sentence deconstruction steps.
  • Be able to identify any given word in a sentence.
  • Be able to select pronouns which agree with antecedents and verbs which agree with subjects.
  • Be able to correct errors in subject-verb or pronoun-antecedent agreement.