COMM 325:   Processes of Criticism

Fall 2010

 

Instructor:              Kurt Paulsen           

            Office HH231   507-344-7732   kpaulsen@blc.edu

Text:              Sonja K. Foss, Rhetorical Criticism Exploration and Practice (3nd  or 4th ed.)

 

About this course:

 

 

My hopes:  I hope this class will take you to the center of communication studies, where it is (I believe) most interesting and valuable, and I hope that you will love it there.

My expectations:  I expect you will be present for every class, be there on time, contribute to lively discussions, fulfill assignments conscientiously and on time, and you will not plagiarize.

My standards:  More than 3 absences will affect your grade, quizzes missed for any reason can be made up prior to next class meeting at the price of a lowered grade – after that they are marked failure, plagiarism risks failure in the course.

 

 

Through this course you should become better able to…

·      understand how and why people act as they do in rhetorical situations

·      understand many ways that we respond to symbols in our lives

·      perceive the important elements of a communication experience (critical analysis)

·      understand how those elements interact to produce their effects (critical synthesis)

·      discern the good and the bad in communication practices and messages (critical judgment)

·      explain your sound critical judgments understandably and convincingly

·      appreciate how practical a good theory is for understanding and guiding practice

·      better understand the culture into which we are sent with the Christian message (BLC mission)

 

 

Major goals of the course:

 

After successfully completing this course you will be more knowledgeable and skilled about…

 

1. speaking well. To demonstrate this, you will

·      prepare a thoroughly researched and well written critical study, then distill its essence into a 9-10 minute speech to be presented to a variety of audiences

2. exercising critical analysis and judgment about rhetorical situations, disclosing the social and historical significance of communication through the application of principles and theory. To demonstrate this, you will 

·      systematically carry out a critical study through a series of essential steps, culminating in the presentation described above

 

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