Acknowledging that nearly everything
we read belongs to a genre is the first step to really understanding all the
conventions are attached to those genres. A fairly modern genre is Rate My
Professor reviews. Students flock in large numbers armed with their laptops to
write up fairly concise reviews about their professors and the classes that they
teach. Although these reviews do not belong to a very typical genre, they
belong to a genre nonetheless.
There are many conventions that can
be associated with Rate My Professor reviews. These conventions include but are
not limited to students writing about whether or not it is easy to get an A,
their experience with the midterm and final, whether or not they liked the
professor, whether or not you actually need to attend lecture, and whether or
not they recommend taking the class. Students writing about whether or not the
class is easy can probably be attributed to the writers knowing that is a main
concern for the other students who are reading the reviews. Most all of the conventions
of this genre exist because one student is trying to advice another student.
However, there are some outlier conventions that are not so easily explained.
One such convention is when students write about the appearance of the
professors such as how they look or dress. This convention is unlike the rest
in that it does not serve to advise other students about the professor or the
course.
The intended audience of these
reviews is other students who are debating whether or not to take a course or
which professor they want to take a course with. Although it is important to
remember that the intended audience of the writers of the reviews is not the
only audience. It is safe to say that many others, including the professors
themselves, wander on to the website and read the reviews. The intended audience
links directly to the writer’s purpose for writing the review. Many of the writers
take a few minutes out of their days to write these reviews because they
genuinely want to give useful advice to other students. Some other writers may
write their reviews because they feel very strongly, either negatively or
positively, about the professor and they want their rating on the website to
represent their feelings about that professor.
The stylistic pattern of these
reviews is casual, informal writing. The students generally write as if they
were talking to a close friend. Grammar mistakes, slang, and misspelled words
are frequent. The reviews also tend to be short and to the point. The writers
likely make their reviews short because they know that the readers will likely
lose interest in a long review and they also may not want to spend an extended
amount of time writing their reviews.
Logos is the most commonly used
rhetorical strategy in Rate My Professor reviews. The writer uses logos to make
their argument because they want the audience to believe them. The writers know
that appealing to logic will be the most effective form of persuasion because
the readers of the reviews are trying to find logical information about the
professors and their classes. The readers are not likely to be interested in
the emotions of the writer so pathos does not play a role in many of the
reviews. Ethos is also not very present because many of the readers simply
assume the writers are credible because not many people would have a reason to
write a review about a professor they had never actually had.
Once you begin to look for it, it is
easy to see that even something as simple as reviews about college professors
can become a genre. Understanding genres and their conventions can help us
understand what we read on a deeper level.
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ReplyDeleteRate My Professor is such a creative and unique genre choice, I love it! I thought that short texts, such as tweets or reviews, would be a tough genre to break down, but you showed that there are more than enough conventions and rhetorical features to analyze simple genres like these. I like that you addressed the convention of reviewing a professor’s looks, even though you had no explanation for why it exists. I also agree that short reviews are a convention of this genre - I’ve completely skipped over the few long reviews I’ve seen on this website. I've never actually written a review for the website, but I now feel completely prepared to do so.
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