Actually, this is more a matter of what's called the conditional mood;
in this case, the "unreal" conditional. it's a pattern -- a little
complex, but if a student learns it, it should make sense -- unlike
"simple" things like phrasal verbs.
Here's a resource:
http://www.englishpage.com/conditional/conditionalintro.html
Do more Google searching on "conditional mood" to find more; also,
look at the Azar grammar books (I think we have one, but I don't know
if it's the level with discussion of conditional); also, the big blue
Grammar Book should have a good explanation, and possibly the
handbooks, under their ESL sections.
*
Regarding critical analysis: it depends on the professor, so see if we
have the handout on file -- or ask the student to show you. But my
guess is this: the student should critically evaluate the essay, but
not the TOPIC that the essay is about. So, let's say the essay is
about smoking in public places; the student's critical (or rhetorical)
analysis should focus on how well the author constructs his or her
argument about smoking in public places. It should NOT be about what
the student thinks about smoking in public places.
So:
(1) student -- (2) essay under analysis -- (3) topic the essay is
about --
are the three layers; the student looks at the middle (2) layer, not
at the (3) layer, except indirectly.
Now, remember: it does depend on whose class this is for. Professors
in ENGL 1302 (or sometimes 1301) approach Rhetorical Analysis
differently. Some would say the student should simply analize the
rhetorical methods, and ignore whether they are effective or not;
others would say, focus mainly on whether they're effective; still
others would say, leave that until the end, after you objective
analyze the methods; others seem to want nothing more than a summary
of the essay (which is not right, in my opinion, but that's why you
need the assignment handout. And of course, we wouldn't tell the
student, "That's not how I would do it!").
I have asked in the past for model RA's-- since I'm doing Literature-
based 1302, I don't have any on hand; what we need for training are
some student-written RA's for the various types (various professors)
that we can study ourselves. I'll ask again...
On Nov 4, 12:52 pm, Shannon Stoney <
shannonsto...@frontiernet.net>
wrote: