COMM 301 Week 6 Discussion | Los Rios Community College
- Los Rios Community College District Office / COMM 301
- 01 Feb 2023
- Price: $6
- Humanities Assignment Help / Educational Assignment Help
COMM 301 Week 6 Discussion | Los Rios Community College
Proposition
Me! Then Give Me a Makeover!
One of our objectives this week is to begin to formulate our
persuasive propositions. A proposition is a clear and concise STATEMENT of the
change you wish to see as a result of your speech. In other words, it is a
STATEMENT calling for change. The proposition is not a question.
The proposition is not a general topic.
Good propositions:
·
FLC students should
consider pursuing a certificate in Applied Communication Skills. (Policy)
·
The lunar landing was
a hoax. (Factual)
·
Elvis is alive.
(Factual)
·
Public colleges and
universities should be free. (Policy)
·
College athletes
should be paid. (Policy)
·
Practice random acts
of kindness. (Policy)
·
Your vote matters.
(Factual)
·
Employer-based health
insurance is fair. (Value)
·
Private businesses
running public utilities is a bad idea. (Value)
Poor propositions:
·
Child abuse.
(What about it? What change in belief or behavior is being sought,
here? Is anyone in favor of child abuse?
·
Why we should overturn
Citizens United. ("Why " is a question word. Just say,
"We should overturn Citizens United.)
·
We should do something
about plastic. (1. "Do something" is vague. 2. Tell us
what specific change we should make. 3. This is also on the forbidden topics
list)
Propositions can be difficult to write so we're going to help
each other out with this. You do not have to pick big, national
issues. (These are usually pretty difficult to cover well in 8 minutes.).
Think of a change you'd like so see in the world. One of my all-time favorite
persuasive speeches advocated allowing people to merge in front of you in
traffic. So think about something you care about.)
Part I: Take a stab at a proposition. Do your best,
and no worries if it's not perfect or if you change your mind later. The
important thing is to learn how to do this, so write. your proposition.
Part II: Proposition makeover.
Reply to a classmate who does not yet have a reply. Attempt to
rehabilitate their proposition. Example: Let's say a classmate
writes, "We should not forgive student loans."
You might reply, "Cool topic, but this is not a statement calling for
change, because the United States currently does not forgive
student loans. Perhaps you could go with a value proposition instead,
like "Student loan forgiveness is a bad idea for the United
States." If you think your classmate's proposition is fine as is,
tell your classmate why you think their proposition is fine as it is.