Public Speaking midterm (UF spc2608)
Specific purpose for an informative speech
Acting as a teacher, ex: To inform my audience about the rise and fall of ancient Rome
Specific purpose for a persuasive speech
Acting as an advocate, ex: to persuade my audience to convert to buddhism
Charts
useful for visually displaying quantitative or statistical information
Qualities of voice
pitch, volume, rate, pauses, vocal variety, articulation, dialect, pronunciation
Testimony
quotations or paraphrases used to support a point
Transition
(n.) a change from one state or condition to another ex: Not that we have discussed this, let us go to this
how to decided which main points to use
- Make it two or three - Put things into categories
Cite sources orally
- The book or magazine your are citing - The author or sponsorship of document - The author's qualifications - The date it was published
Three Guidelines for Ethical Listening
1. Be courteous and attentive 2. Avoid prejudging the speaker 3. Maintain the free and open expression of ideas
Steps in speech preparation
1. Brainstorm 2. Choose topic 3. General purpose 4. Specific purpose (what you hope to accomplish) 5. Central idea
Guidelines for Ethical Speaking
1) Make Sure Your Goals Are Ethically Sound 2) Be Fully Prepared For Each Speech 3) Be Honest In What You Say 4) Avoid Name Calling and Other Forms Of Abusive Language 5) Put Ethical Principles Into Practice
Tips for intro
1) keep relatively brief 2) Look for intro materials while researching 3) be creative in devising 4) Don't worry about exact wording until after preparing body of speech 5) Work out intro in detail. 6) Don't start talking too soon
demographic characteristics of an audience:
1. Age 2. religion 3. racial, ethnic, cultural background 4. gender and sexual orientation 5. group membership
Judging the reliability of research documents
1. Authorship - make sure the author is credible 2. Sponsorship - An organization responsible for a document if there is no author 3. Recency - look up publication date and make sure recent enough to use
questions to ask about specific purpose
1. Does my purpose meet the assignment? 2. Can I accomplish my purpose in the time allotted? 3. Is the purpose relevant to my audience? 4. Is the purpose too trivial (young-sounding) for my audience? 5. Is the purpose too technical for my audience?
How to practice delivery
1. Go through preparation outline aloud 2. Prepare your speaking outline 3. Practice your speech several times aloud using the outline 4. Polish your delivery (vocal variety etc) 5. Give your speech a dress rehearsal
Ethical public speaking checklist
1. Have I examined my goals to make sure they are ethically sound? 2. Have I fulfilled my ethical obligation to prepare fully for the speech? 3. Is the speech free of plagiarism? 4. Am I honest in what I say in the speech? 5. Do I use the power of language ethically? (avoid name-calling) 6. All in all, am I ethical in speech?
Tips for conclusion
1. Keep an eye out for concluding material 2. Conclude with a bang 3. Keep it relatively short 4. Work it out in detail
Four tips for using testimonies
1. Quote of phrase accurately 2. Use testimony from qualified sources 3. Use testimony from unbiased source 4. Identify the people you quote or phrase
Four methods of speech delivery
1. Reading verbatim from a manuscript 2. Reciting a memorized text 3. Speaking impromptu 4. extemporaneous speech (use note cards)
Answering - impromptu speaking
1. State the point you are answering 2. State the point testimony 3. Support your point 4. Summarize
Formulating specific purpose statement
1. Write as full infinite phrase, not fragment 2. Express purpose as statement, not a question 3. Avoid figurative language in purpose statement 4. Limit to one distinct idea 5. make sure not too vague or general
Appropriate number of steps in an info speech
2-5
How many main points should you have?
3-4
Find information from academic databases
Academic OneFil and Jstor Citation: includes title, author name, etc Related subjects: additional articles Abstract or article: The full text
Back ups to technology
Always bring a back up of your slides
Adapting to your audience before you speak
Asses how your audience will respond to what you say Adjust what you say to make it as convincing as possible
At what stage you should consider your audience in the speech preparation process
Before the speech: part of your preparation During the presentation itself
Ethnocentrism
Belief in the superiority of one's nation or ethnic group.
Types of examples and stories
Brief extended hypothetical
Ways to organize main points
Chronological order (1990, 1991, 1992) - inform Spatical order - follow a directional patter (north, central, southern) - inform Casual order - show cause-effect relationship (both) Problem-Solution Order - states problem and the solution (persuasive) Topical Order - Divide speech topic into subtopics (used most often)
Choosing the best visual aid
Could bring it in depending on size and availability, could use a model if not etc
Types of endings
Crescendo - speech builds to power Dissolve - Emotional appeal by fading step by step
Tips for research interviews (before)
Define the purpose of the interview decide who to interviews arrange the interview decided to record the interview prepare your questions
Types of visual aids
objects, models, graphs, charts , videos, speaker, photographs, drawings
Elements of good speech delivery
Does not distract the audience, use direct eye contact, and speak with intelligence
Guidelines for effective information speeches
Don't overestimate what the audience knows Relate the subject directly to the audience Don't be too technical Avoid abstraction - through description, compare, contrast Personalize your ideas Be creative
Appearance
Dress to impressive and dress for the occasion
which type is the life of a speech
EXAMPLES
what might be the most important audience characteristic to know given a specific topic:
Ex: If you are talking to a frat, want to focus on group membership
types of supporting information you can use
Examples Statistics Testimony
Types of testimony and when to use
Expert - testimony from experts Peer - testimony from friends with firsthand experience Quoting vs phrasing - Testimony from what someone else says (quote)
Informing audiences about concepts processes
Explaining a process so people understand it better Explain a process so people can perform it - Use chronological or topical order
Articulation
Failure to form particular speech sounds ex: saying lemme instead of let me
Organizing the body of information speech
Figure out order of main points - chronological - topical - spatial - upper, middle, lower Mississippi
Questionnaires
Fixed alternative questions: fixed choice between two or more responses Scale questions: like fixed alternative responses but allow more leeway Open-ended questions: give lots of leeway in responding
Parts of an intro and importance to each
Get attention of audience
Objectives of the intro
Get the attention and interest of your audience Reveal the topic of your speech Establish credibility Preview the body
Start speech research early
Gives you time to think about what you found and really put the pieces together
Types of Plagiarism
Global plagiarism Patchwork plagiarism Incremental plagiarism Paraphrase
The value of examples in speeches
Help you clarify your point Reinforce your ideas personalize your ideas
Way to emphasize when you have a very unpopular topic
Highlight the local angle - person, place, or thing
Ways to analyze your audience
Identify the general demographic features of your audience Measure the importance of those features
Pluses and minuses of presentation technology
If there is too much going on, it will dominate your speech. If there is just a right amount, it will help the communication of the speech
Time limit on speeches
If time is cut, modify presentation to most essential points
qualities of a good conclusion
If you have carefully built to a peak of interest, people will know you are ending
Types of general purpose statements
Informing (explain, report, demonstrate) and Persuading (sell, advocate, defend)
3 types of audience disposition
Interest - need to be interested in the topic Knowledge - People more interested in what they know about it Attitude - Frame of mind in favor or opposed to a person, policy etc
Internet vs library
Internet - everything is on there and not everything is truthful Library - Everything goes through people so it is all good info
Research interviews
Interviews to collect data
Audience wondering when listening to an informative speech
Is the information communicated clearly and accurately? Is the information meaningful and interesting to the audience?
Importance of drawing on your own knowledge for speeches
It brings the speech to life and makes it more convincing
Rules to keep in mind when preparing main points
Keep main points separate Try to use same pattern for wording main points Balance time devoted to main points
Not being too technical
Know what can be explained to an ordinary audience and what can not
Parts of speech conclusion
Let audience know you are ending and reinforce the central idea
Delivering with visual aids
Make sure listeners can see them Do not pass visual aids among the audience Only display when speaking about them Explain them clearly Do not look at visual aid when explaining it Practice with them Check the room before
Ethical guidelines for using stats
Make sure stats are representative Statistical measures used correctly Statistics from reliable source
Importance of organizing a speech
Makes you look more trustworthy and reliable
Adapting to your audience as you speak
May need to go over points again or modify if they do not seem pleased
Organizing supporting materials
Need to be relevant to main points
Rules for a specific purpose statement
Needs to be concise and clear and include the audience (keeps them center of attention) Ex: to inform my audience about the benefits of music therapy for people with psychological or cognitive disabilities
Rules for a good general purpose
Needs to be general and you must know what you want to achieve by speaking ex: persuade, inform, explain
Length of intro and delivery
Needs to be pretty brief and wait till audience has quieted down to speak
Purpose statement phrasing
Needs to being with what you want to achieve by speaking (to inform, persuade) not a question, not a fragment, no figurative language, one distinct idea
Specific purpose of an informative speech
Not too broad or general Include: chronological, spatial, topical
Egocentric audiences
People being concerned with their own values and beliefs Speaker: need to adapt your speech to audiences interests
Advantaged of using visual aids
People find the message more interesting, grasp it easier and retain it longer
Speeches about objects
Person, place,structure Chronological spacial topical
Brainstorming
Personal inventory: make a list of your hobbies, skills etc Clustering: make 9 columns including people, place, thing, events, processes, plans, and policies, problems, concepts, natural phenomena Internet search: encyclopedias, subject-base website etc
Speech connectives
Phrases connecting ideas 1. transitions 2. internal previews 3. internal summaries 4. signpots
Effective use of visual aids
Prepare visual aids well in advanced Keep visual aids simple Make sure visual aids are large enough Use limited amount of text Use fonts, colors, and images effectively
Personalizing ideas
Present one's ideas in human terms that relate in some fashion to the experience of the audience
Visual aids in intros
Provide images that enhance the impact of the speaker's words - relate to your speech topic
Relating the subject to the audience
Put your audience directly into your speech ex: "Your body can not go any further .." - use you and your
How to get information about an audience?
Questionares
Major functions of a conclusion
Reinforcing my idea Short part of my speech Have strong language
Rounding off stats
Relate the statistics to what you are talking about and do not make them too complicated
Way to grab an audience's attention
Relate the topic to the audience State importance of your topic Startle your audience - sexually assaulted comment Arouse curiosity/build suspense Question the audience - how would you respond? Begin with a quote tell a story
Tips for research interviews (after)
Review your notes asap (main points and things that will help with your essay) transcribe your notes
Ways to vividly end a speech
Say things like "in conclusion" or "Let me end by saying"
How speech should change if audience gets larger
Should become more formal
Length of videos
Should not be longer than 30 seconds
What is informative speaking
Speaking designed to display knowledge and understanding
Jargons/technical language
Specialized or technical words and expressions spoken by people who share a particular occupation or interest. - should not use if talking to a generalized audience
Establishing credibility at beginning of speech
Stating you know what you are talking about - does not have to be firsthand
How to reinforce your central idea
Summarize your speech End with a quote Make a dramatic statement Refer to the intro
Pharaphrasing
Summary of author's ideas - used when quote is more than one or two sentences - used when wording of quote is obscure
Central idea phrasing
Sums up your speech 1.Needs to be a full sentence 2. not a question 3. avoid figurative language 4. not vague
Supporting materials in speeches
Supports to speakers point of view
Preparing bibliographies
Take notes on what you read Have notes in good format Make a separate entry for each note distinguish between direct quotes, paraphrases etc
Take research notes effectively
Take plenty of notes Record notes in consistent format Make a separate entry for each note distinguish between direct quotes, paraphrases etc
Why you should limit the number of main points
The audience will be confused and have trouble sorting them out
Types of informative speeches
objects, processes, events, concepts
Contrast
The state of being noticeably different from something else when put or considered together.
barriers of information speeches
Topics interesting to them may not be interesting to listener
Physical setting factors
Try to see the size of the room, what time you will be presenting etc. If there is nothing you can control, make sure to do a great job at speaking
Find information from periodicals guide
Type in a subject in the database text box and citations will appear. Abstract (summary) may appear. Proquest, World News Digest
Find information from government resource
Usa.gov - web pages from governments United States Census Bureau - statistical info World Facebook - info of every country
How to narrow a google search
Use questions Be specific Look at different resources (news, images etc.)
When to use different rates of speaking
When looking at the nature of the occasion, the mood they are trying to create, who the audience is
How to help examples or statistics have more impact
When they are put together. Shows the examples to be typical
preliminary bibliography
a list compiled early in the research process of works that look as if they might contain helpful information about a speech topic
Catalogue
a listing of all the books, periodicals, and other resources owned by a library
Call number
a number used in libraries to classify books and periodicals and to indicate where they can be found on the shelves
Quotation books
offer famous or notable quotations on a variety of subjects
Brief example
a specific case referred to in passing to illustrate a point
Internal previews
a statement in the body of the speech that lets the audience know what the speaker is going to discuss next ex: Now that we have seen this, let's look at some solutions
Internal summary
a statement in the body of the speech that summarizes the speaker's preceding point or points ex: Let's summarize
Preview statement
a statement in the introduction of a speech that identifies the main points to be discussed in the body - signal you are going into body and will help with understanding rest of the speech
Comparison
a statement of the similarities among two or more people, events, ideas, etc.
Description
a statement that depicts a person, event, idea, or the like with clarity and vividness
Extended example
a story, narrative, or anecdote developed at some length to illustrate a point
signpost
a very brief statement that indicates where a speaker is in the speech or that focuses attention on key ideas ex: So how serious is the problem?
Reference work
a work that synthesizes a large amount of related information for easy access by researchers (encyclopedias, yearbooks, etc)
Advantages/disadvantages of wikipedia
advantage: convenient, vast amount of info disadvantage: not very reliable
Hypothetical example
an example that describes an imaginary or fictitious situation
Speeches about events
anything that happens or is regarded as happening - chronological or topical
Qualities of speakers body
appearance, movement, gesture, eye contact
Managing the Q and A
approach questions with a positive attitude listen carefully direct answers to entire audience Be honest and stright forward Stay on track
Mean
average
Five resources for finding what you need in the library
catalogue, call number, reference work, biographical aids, quotation books
nonverbal communication
communication based on a person's use of voice and body, rather than on the use of words importance: will help you control
Biographical aids
contain brief life and career facts about contemporary men and women
Eye contact
direct visual contact with the eyes of another person - constantly scan the room/look at whole audience
Tips for research interviews (during)
dress appropriate and be on time Explain the purpose of the interview Set up recorded Keep interview on track Listen carefully Don't overstay your welcome
situational audience analysis
examination of the time and place of a speech, the audience size, and the speaking occasion in order to develop a clear and effective message
incremental plagiarism
failing to give credit for particular parts of a speech that are borrowed from other people Avoid by: giving credit to the author for their words
Preparing for Q and A
formulate answers to possible questions practice the delivery of your answers (brief and to the point)
audience centered
keeping the audience foremost in mind at every step of speech preparation and presentation importance: You gain a desired response from the audience
Choosing the right type of graph
line graph - most common (two lines) pie graph - Simple distribution patterns Bar graph - comparison between two or more iteams
Gestures
motions of a speaker's hands or arms during a speech - do not allow gestures to distract your message
impromptu speaking
no prep - listen to what others are saying so you can respond - take notes of major points
global plagiarism
stealing a speech entirely from a single source and passing it off as one's own How to avoid: don't leave your speech for the last minute
patchwork plagiarism
stealing ideas or language from two or three sources and passing them off as one's own How to avoid: Start working on your speech right away and use several sources
Kinesics
study of body language
pronunciation
the accepted standard of how a word sounds when spoken ex: not saying the p in pneumonia
When verbal and nonverbal messages conflict
the listener is most likely to believe the nonverbal, body language than the message
Main points
the major points developed in the body of a speech
Median
the middle score in a distribution; half the scores are above it and half are below it
Mode
the most frequently occurring score(s) in a distribution