Speech Exam 1
false starts
"Before I begin..."; these generally irritate audiences and label you as innefective
central idea
(thesis)
organized audience
A group with a rigid division of labor and authority supported by specific common purposes and interests
unnecessary apologies
Ex: "I didn't have much time to prepare"
perception
How we discern or assign meanings to messages. The theory is that we hypothesize about messages, which we then accept or reject on the basis of personal constructs based on prior learning and experience.
overstatement
Includes distortion, imprudence, misrepresentation, and over exaggeration to get attention.
communication
Primarily concerned with meaning; Meaning becomes a social construction based primarily on our life experiences, our perceptions of reality, and our language habits.
pedestrian audience
a temporary audience, such as a group of pedestrians on a busy street corner
discussion and passive audience
an audience whose attention is already secured or guaranteed by rules of order.
selected audience
an audience whose members are assembled for some common purpose, but not all are sympathetic to one another or to the speaker's point of view
concerted audience
an audience whose members assemble with a common, active purpose in mind, with sympathetic interest in a mutual enterprise, but with no clear division of labor or rigid organization of authority
objectification
an intellectualization or pragmatic explanation of what is happening to you
state anxiety
anxiety due to the particular communication circumstance, not anxiety in general
cognitive restructuring
changing the way one thinks. A technique used to reduce communication apprehension
model
generally refers to a representation of a thing or process
three general purposes of a speech
inform, persuade, entertain
three basic parts of a speech
introduction, body, conclusion
encoding
putting together a message and conveying it symbolically through words and nonverbals to an audience
trait anxiety
refers to anxiety across many or all communication situations
demographics
refers to the study of groups in terms of their common vital statistics. Typically a statistical averaging of your peers' ages, education, politics, etc.
decoding
sorting out, selecting, and eliciting meanings from one's storehouse of knowledge, experience, and training until he or she constructs in his or her own mind a notion of the images and ideas contained in the mind of the sender
transitions
specific language segments that connect one idea to another.
feedback
what the receiver provides to the speaker to let him or her know how the message is coming across to the audience and allows the speaker to make adjustments
specific purpose
your goal of the speech.