Skip to Content

Rethink Your Closet Worksheet

Rethink Your Closet Worksheet

About This Worksheet
Rethink Your Closet is a grade 8 persuasive text analysis worksheet focused on identifying appeals to logic, credibility, and emotion. It is an upper middle school literacy resource that teaches students how authors structure arguments to influence readers. The passage examines the environmental and social impacts of fast fashion. For example, statistics about textile waste become an appeal to logic that strengthens the argument. This worksheet builds students’ ability to evaluate how persuasive techniques support a central claim.

Curriculum and Grade Alignment
This worksheet is designed for Grade 8 and emphasizes analyzing rhetorical appeals in argumentative texts. The primary learning goal is to identify and explain how authors use logos, ethos, and pathos to persuade readers. Students should already understand how to identify claims and supporting evidence before completing this activity. The next progression skill involves evaluating the effectiveness of rhetorical strategies in longer argumentative essays. This resource aligns with CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RI.8.6, which focuses on determining an author’s point of view and analyzing how it is conveyed.

Student Tasks
On this worksheet, students will read a persuasive article about the hidden costs of fast fashion. They identify examples of appeals to logic, credibility, and emotion within the text. Learners cite specific evidence to support their analysis. Students explain how each appeal strengthens the author’s argument. Each response requires close reading and clear reference to textual details.

Common Challenges and Misconceptions
Students may confuse general evidence with specific rhetorical appeals. Some learners might label statistics as emotional appeals instead of logical ones. Others may struggle to distinguish between appeals to credibility and simple factual information. Explaining how each appeal influences readers can also be difficult. Teachers can model identifying signal phrases and categorizing evidence by type of appeal.

Implementation Guidance
Teachers can use this worksheet during a unit on persuasive writing or rhetorical analysis. It works well as preparation for students crafting their own argumentative essays. In small groups, students can discuss which appeal seems most persuasive and why. Homeschool educators may guide students in annotating the text for logos, ethos, and pathos before answering questions. The worksheet supports advanced analytical reading and writing skills.

Details and Features
The worksheet includes a multi-paragraph persuasive article with clearly structured arguments. Questions focus on identifying and analyzing rhetorical techniques. The layout provides space for complete written responses. The printable design is classroom-ready and easy to distribute. The environmental topic connects literacy skills to real-world issues.