Oparational Goals.
Your operational goal is, of course, to write an engaging, thought-provoking persuasive opinion
piece. This piece will construct an erudite and cogent argument while also trading on the ethos and
name of the byliner, and is so compelling that the Journal is inclined to run it. • Your mission
goal is to increase the knowledge and positively affect the attitudes and behaviors of the
Journal’s readers vis-à-vis the topic of the state of writing and writing education in the United
States. b. Your op-ed should discuss this initiative within a context of “we can’t leave writing
education behind in America’s quest to excel in math and science education.” c. You want to respond
to (or springboard from) the Mullich piece to make your point that writing education deserves
attention as well. 3. Think about the kinds of appeals or persuasive strategies you’ll employ. 4.
Think about what you want the op-ed to accomplish: a. Persuade readers that the state of writing
and writing education in America is worthy of attention. b. Get readers (think about who reads the
Journal) to consider pledging to the initiative without overtly asking them to do so. c. Remember,
U.S. businesses lose nearly $3 billion annually due to poor workplace writing (see National
Commission on Writing, 2004, found in the Week 1 course folder). This is a large amount of money,
but ask yourself if it is big bucks within the context of the overall U.S. economy. Context is
important. I will upload LOTS OF information to draw from