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The Art of Persuasion

Other • 45 • 6 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Other
45
6 students
25 August 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 3 of 6 in the unit "Communications in Action". Lesson Title: The Art of Persuasion Lesson Description: Students will learn persuasive communication techniques, including the use of ethos, pathos, and logos. They will practice crafting persuasive messages and delivering them in a compelling manner.

Overview

Unit: Communications in Action (Lesson 3 of 6)
Duration: 45 minutes
Class size: 6 students
Year: 5th and 6th Year (Mixed ability, ASD-specific LCA and L2 students)
Country: Ireland
Curriculum Framework: IE Curriculum (Curriculum Framework for Ireland)
Subject Area: Other – Communication & Personal Development


Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:

  • LO1: Identify and explain the three classical persuasive techniques: ethos, pathos, and logos.
    (IE Curriculum Standard: Oral Language Competency – Understanding and using persuasion techniques in spoken communication)
  • LO2: Analyse short persuasive messages or adverts to recognise the use of ethos, pathos, and logos.
    (IE Curriculum Standard: Critical Literacy and Media Literacy competencies)
  • LO3: Create a short persuasive message using at least two of the techniques learned.
    (IE Curriculum Standard: Express ideas clearly using appropriate communication methods)
  • LO4: Deliver their persuasive message confidently to peers, using tone, gesture, and eye contact as appropriate.
    (IE Curriculum Standard: Oral Language Competency – Spoken Presentation Skills)

Success Criteria

Students will demonstrate success when they:

  • Can clearly define and give an example of ethos, pathos, and logos.
  • Correctly identify persuasive techniques in visual or audio advertisements used during the lesson.
  • Produce a persuasive message incorporating two or more persuasion strategies.
  • Present their message with clarity, maintaining audience engagement through vocal and non-verbal cues.

Resources Needed

  • Whiteboard or digital board and markers
  • Printed visual advertisements (dyslexia-friendly fonts and layouts)
  • Audio clips of short persuasive adverts or speeches (captioned if possible)
  • Individual whiteboards or notebooks for students
  • Visual aids defining ethos, pathos, logos (icon-based, minimal text)
  • Timer or stopwatch
  • Support cards with sentence starters for persuasive language
  • Headphones if needed for sensory-sensitive students
  • Reward stickers or positive behaviour tokens

Lesson Structure

1. Starter / Warm-Up (5 mins)

  • Activity: Emotion Quick-Draw
    • Show 3 short images or videos (simple, clear emotions) on the board.
    • Students describe how they feel about each (e.g., happy, sad, curious).
    • Link this to pathos by explaining how effective communication connects emotionally.
    • Use dyslexia-friendly printed emotion cards to assist vocabulary.

2. Introduction to Persuasion Techniques (10 mins)

  • Teacher explains ethos, pathos, and logos using simple, clear definitions with visuals and one example each:
    • Ethos: Credibility/trust ("I am a doctor, so you should listen to me")
    • Pathos: Emotion ("Imagine how sad it is...")
    • Logos: Logic/facts ("Statistics show that...")
  • Use real-life examples relevant to students’ interests (sports figures, local events).
  • Use colour-coded cards for each technique for easy reference.

Differentiation: Use sentence frame cards to support students struggling with vocabulary, e.g.

  • "I believe this because..." (ethos)
  • "This makes people feel..." (pathos)
  • "The fact is that..." (logos)

3. Guided Analysis of Persuasive Messages (10 mins)

  • Divide class into pairs. Give each pair a printed advertisement or short audio clip.
  • Task: Identify which persuasion technique(s) are used.
  • Teacher circulates, offering support where needed, using prompts.
  • Students write or point to the technique on their mini whiteboards.

Extension for advanced learners:

  • Ask them to identify if multiple techniques are combined and discuss which is most effective and why.

4. Creating Persuasive Messages (12 mins)

  • Each student chooses a topic (e.g., persuade the class to recycle more, to try a new sport).
  • Using provided templates and sentence starters, students write 3-4 sentences applying ethos, pathos, or logos.
  • Teacher supports students by modelling examples on the board and scaffolding language.

Dyslexia-friendly adaptations:

  • Provide printed prompts with clear font and spacing.
  • Offer options to dictate message to teacher or use speech-to-text tools if available.

5. Presentation and Feedback (7 mins)

  • Each student delivers their persuasive message to the group.
  • Peers and teacher give positive, constructive feedback based on success criteria: clarity, use of persuasion techniques, and engagement.
  • Use a “Two Stars and a Wish” format: Two positive observations, one suggestion for improvement.

Differentiation Strategies

  • Visual supports: Use icons, colour-coding, and minimal text to explain abstract concepts.
  • Sentence stems & frames: To assist verbal and written expression.
  • Multi-modal input/output: Allow messages to be created/write or spoken/dictated.
  • Sensory breaks: Offer quiet space during activities as needed.
  • Peer support: Strategic pairing with higher-achieving or supportive peers.
  • Extra time: Flexible pacing for writing and presentations.

Extension Activities for Advanced Learners

  • Analyse a longer persuasive speech or advertisement, deconstructing the use of techniques in detail.
  • Write a persuasive letter or script incorporating ethos, pathos, and logos for a real-world context (e.g., school council proposal).
  • Experiment with non-verbal persuasion: create a poster or digital media message focusing on visual ethos/pathos/logos cues.

Assessment

Formative Assessment:

  • Observation of students’ participation in discussions and group work.
  • Teacher checks understanding via mini whiteboard responses during analysis.
  • Review of written persuasive messages for correct application of techniques.
  • Listening to presentations for clear delivery and use of persuasive devices.

Summative Assessment (Informal):

  • Collect students’ persuasive writing samples to assess comprehension of techniques.

Reflection and Next Steps

  • Reflect on which persuasion techniques students found easiest/difficult.
  • Discuss applications of these skills outside the classroom (advertising, daily conversations).
  • Preview Lesson 4: Applying Persuasion in Debates – encourage students to think about how these skills can influence arguments and decisions.

Thank you for fostering engaging, inclusive communication skills with your students!

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