Public Speaking- Chapter 8: Outlining and Organizing
causal speech
a speech that informs audience members about causes and effects that have already happened.
speaking outline
a succinct outline that uses words or short phrases to represent the components of a speech and that is used during speech delivery.
transitional statements
phrases or statements that lead from one distinct-but-connected idea to another.
internal previews
short descriptions of what a speaker will do and say during a speech; may be at the beginning and within the body of a speech.
organization styles
templates for organizing the main points of a speech that rooted in traditions of public discourse and can jumpstart the speech-writing process.
main points
the key pieces of information or arguments contained within a talk or presentation.
general purpose statement
the overarching goal of a speech; for instance, to inform, to persuade, to inspire, to celebrate, to mourn, or to entertain.
signposts
According to Beebe and Beebe, "words and gestures that allow you to move smoothly from one idea to the next throughout your speech, showing relationships between ideas and emphasizing important points" (2005, p. 204).
rhetorical situation
According to Lloyd Bitzer, "a complex of persons, events, objects, and relations presenting an actual or potential exigence which can be completely or partially removed if discourse, introduced into the situation, can so constrain human decision or action as to bring about the significant modification of the exigence" (1968, p. 6).
Monroe's Motivated Sequence
An organization style that is designed to motivate the audience to take a particular action and is characterized by a five-step sequence: (1) attention, (2) need, (3) satisfaction, (4), visualization, and (5) action appeal.
preparation outline
a full-sentence outline that is used during the planning stages to flesh out ideas, arrange main points, and to rehearse the speech; could be used as a script if presenting a manuscript style speech.
thesis statement
a one- or two-sentence encapsulation of the main points of a speech, also called the central idea.
specific purpose statement
a sentence or two that describe precisely what the speech is intended to do.
topical speech
a speech in which main points are developed separately and are generally connected together within the introduction and conclusion.
problem-solution speech
a speech in which problems and solutions are presented alongside one another with a clear link between a problem and its solution.
spatial speech
a speech in which the main points are arranged according to their physical and geographic relationships.
chronological speech
a speech in which the main points are delivered according to when they happened and could be traced on a calendar or clock.
comparative speech
a speech in which two or more objects, ideas, beliefs, events, places, or things are compared or contrasted with one another.
refutation speech
a speech that anticipates the audience's opposition, then brings attention to the tensions between the two sides, and finally refutes them using evidential support.
outline
hierarchical textual arrangement of all the various elements of a speech.
sub-points
information that is used to support the main points of a speech.
parallel structure
main points that are worded using the same structure.