Chapter 2 Public Speaking
As a matter of ethics, audience members should listen attentively to and agree with everything a speaker says. True or False
False
Because persuasion is such a complex process, juggling statistics and quoting out of context to maximize your persuasive effect are ethically acceptable in speeches to persuade. True or false
False
The aim of a speaker is to accomplish his or her goals by any means necessary. True or False
False
The ethical obligation of a speaker to avoid name-calling and other forms of abusive language is essentially a matter of political correctness. True or False
False
Unlike writers, public speakers can present other people's ideas as their own without being guilty of plagiarism. True or false
False
Ethical issues can arise at every stage of the speechmaking process. True or false
True
Ethics is the branch of philosophy that deals with issues of right and wrong in human affairs. True or False
True
Incremental plagiarism occurs when a speaker uses quotations or paraphrases without citing the sources of the statements. True or False
True
It is necessary for public speaker to identify his or her source whether the speaker is paraphrasing or quoting verbatim. True or False
True
Whenever you quote someone directly in a speech, you must attribute the words to that person. True or false
True
three types of plagiarism
global, patchwork, incremental
ethical communication
moral aspects of speaking and listening
global plagiarism
presenting a speech in its entirety from a single source
incremental plagiarism
using increments from a single source
patchwork plagiarism
using several sources without citations