can the writer be trusted
Is the writer trustworthy.
A critical reader of an op-ed piece who is looking for pathos is trying to find emotional appeals.
Pathos
No its not logos its pathos
hard mood
Allowing the reader to identify key content and put them it into her own words.
A critical reader of an op-ed piece who is looking for pathos is trying to find emotional appeals.
A critical reader of an op-ed piece who is looking for pathos is trying to find emotional appeals.
Strong use of fact in the writers arguments
A critical reader with an eye toward logos would be looking for any potential bias the writer might have as well his or her level of knowledge on the subject.
Pathos
Logical arguments
No its not logos its pathos
Does the narrator sound casual or formal
An op-ed piece that effectively conveys emotion, empathy, and personal experiences to evoke a strong emotional response from the reader would please a critical reader looking for pathos. This could include stories of individuals facing hardship, vivid descriptions that evoke feelings of sympathy or compassion, or appeals to shared values and emotions.
As a critical reader focusing on ethos in an op-ed piece, you should pay attention to the author's credibility, expertise, and trustworthiness. Analyze how the author presents themselves to establish authority on the topic and persuade readers to trust their perspective. Look for evidence of ethical reasoning, transparency, and authenticity to evaluate the strength of the ethos in the argument.
That would depend on what feeling the piece is trying to convey. It also depends on what the writer wants the reader to feel. But if I were to answer your question to what i understand it best as, I would say that a piece of literature would let the reader relate, or identify with whatever is being written.
You would look for the subjective opinions of the writer and how that can influence his presentation of factual evidence.