Lost In America Rhetorical Analysis

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Lost in America is a text on how the generations before us were set with a language barrier. Breaking this barrier could a have benefited us in countless ways. It starts from beginning to end, talking about how we begin to change our aspects for foreign countries. Douglas McGray states that students did not study abroad in the world war generations. America basically shuts its door on trying to learn different languages. This hurts us in the wars and foreign affairs. As time went on, this problem begins to get fixed and languages begin to enter the “American,” language. He writes “Lost in America,” with the experience and knowledge through other people. Every person learns through two ways: Through Experience or someone else’s experience. Douglas …show more content…

The author uses words like Globalization, Unnecessary or Missing Capitalization and foreign to show he is in full understanding of the topic. McGray has to have a word choice where students and the learning community will be able to know McGray is a liable writer. He has to show he has full knowledge that everything he types has occurred and is backed with evidence. He describes the government trying to push the study of foreign language in 1975 at the Helsinki Accords. It’s smart that Douglas used these dates to make his text credit sources. He shows his readers that he himself has done the research. Factual evidence was used the most when Douglas described how presidents tried to fund language incentives. He writes that even language classes were needed, but not the main priority by the government. $24million dollars were used to create the language incentive, but it didn’t compare to the $206million dollar requested for Abstinent Sex Education. Our priorities seemed to have been misunderstood back in the early generation, Douglas writes. Language is a cultural diversity between countries, but once we explore languages we are open to a whole new era of education. This new era can help Americans in wars, learning communities, and even

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