Summarize the following:
The most standard way to organize your body paragraphs is to do so by separating them into sections that identify the logos, ethos, and pathos.  The order of logos, ethos, and pathos is not necessarily set in stone. If you intend to focus on one more than the other two, you could briefly cover the two lesser appeals in the first two sections before elaborating on the third in greater detail toward the middle and end of the paper. For logos, identify at least one major claim and evaluate the document's use of objective evidence. For ethos, analyze how the writer or speaker uses his or her status as an "expert" to enhance credibility. For pathos, analyze any details that alter the way that the viewer or reader may feel about the subject at hand. Also analyze any imagery used to appeal to aesthetic senses, and determine how effective these elements are. Wrap things up by discussing the consequences and overall impact of these three appeals. This method is just about as common as organizing your paper by rhetorical appeal, and it is actually more straight-forward.  Start from the beginning of the document and work your way through to the end. Present details about the document and your analysis of those details in the order the original document presents them in. The writer of the original document likely organized the information carefully and purposefully. By addressing the document in this order, your analysis is more likely to make more coherent sense by the end of your paper. Rely on hard evidence rather than opinion or emotion for your analysis.  Evidence often include a great deal of direct quotation and paraphrasing. Point to spots in which the author mentioned his or her credentials to explain ethos. Identify emotional images or words with strong emotional connotations as ways of supporting claims to pathos. Mention specific data and facts used in analysis involving logos. A rhetorical analysis can make an argument, but you need to be scholarly and reasonable in your analysis of the document. Avoid use of the first-person words "I" and "we." Stick to the more objective third-person.
Organize your body paragraphs by rhetorical appeals. Write your analysis in chronological order, instead. Provide plenty of evidence and support. Maintain an objective tone.