| 
		Pratkanis and Aronson (ch. 5) describe 
		Four Key Stratagems that 
		underlie successful persuasion. 
	
	
	Pre-persuasion:  Taking control of the persuasive situation and 
	context in such a way that the rhetor can structure how the issues are framed and 
	how decisions will be judged.
	
	Source Credibility:  Insuring that communicators of the message are seen 
	favorably (seen as likable, trustworthy, authoritative, dynamic, etc.) by the 
	target audience for persuasion.
	
	Message Design:  Creating messages that focus the target audience's 
	attention and thoughts on the concepts that favor the persuasive goal and 
	only on those sorts of thoughts.
	
	Emotions:  Arousing emotional responses in the audience and 
	providing a way for the audience to respond to those emotions in a manner 
	that produces the desired outcome. 
 Fair, Deliberative Persuasion versus Propaganda: 
Questions that determine what is propaganda. 
	
	Does the 
	communication method induce thoughts about the issue at hand   
	OR does it truncate 
	thought and play on prejudice?
	How does 
	the communicator use emotion? -- to add energy to our thoughts and actions 
	on the issue   OR to overwhelm our abilities to engage in thoughtful reflection?   
For 
Discussion on Friday (9/9/16): 
        Imagine you are 
trying to persuade a rational individual and average, adult, taxpaying citizen.  
 
	  For each persuasive topic/goal below, identify  
		  
		  
		  the belief(s)   
		  [i.e. "the facts"], 
and 
		  
		  value(s)   
		  [i.e. morals, what's right and wrong] and/or 
		  
		  motive(s)   
		  [i.e. the audiences self-interests and desires]    . 
	  that should lead to a
	  favorable 
attitude toward the topic/goal (below). 
		  
		  
		  
		       Support 
		for the death penalty.
		  
		  
		       Opposition to the death penalty.
		  
		       
		  Support 
		for including discussions on the use of birth control in high school 
		health classes.
		  
		  
		       Opposition to including discussions on the use of birth control in high 
		school health classes. |