Speech Exam #2
3 goals of research
To develop your own expertise on the topic; to find the evidence that will support your topic; to make your ideas clear, understandable, and pertinent to your audience
forgetting curve
a curve that displays the rate at which something learned is forgotten over
reinforcement
a response by a speaker that rewards the listener to strengthen the listener's positive attitude toward the speech
Stating the importance of your topic
alerts the audience to the significance of your topic before actually stating what the topic is
Anecdote
allows you to develop an example in greater detail; these extended, engaging stories illustrate your point and help the audience relate to the issues
Telling a story
an extended illustration or example that is cast in narrative form; power lies in narrative form
3 basic elements of transitions
an internal summary of what has been completed; a link to what is coming next; an internal preview of the new idea
Reporting
answers who, what, where, when, why, how
Spatial
arranges main ideas according to place or position
Hypothetical example
ask listeners to imagine themselves in a particular situation; helps audience further understand your topic
Opinion testimony
beliefs formed from experience and judgment; asking the audience to accept that conclusion because of the person's expertise, judgment, or knowledge
4 types of examples
brief example, hypothetical example, anecdote, case study
complete sentences
by doing this rather than just highlighting general topics, you force yourself to specify exactly what claims you want to make
Cause-effect
can focus on either first; the choice between these two arrangements would be governed by which topics you wanted to present first and last
Logically dependent ideas
cannot stand on its own but requires that another claim or statements be true
Referring to the speech situation
ceremonial occasions - weddings, commencements, speeches of welcome or farewell; often introduced effectively by an explicit reference to the occasion
5 types of visual aids
charts, graphs, representations, objects and models, people
5 ways to prepare and use visual aids
choose your idea; design your visual aid; avoid distraction; do not obstruct the audience's view; speak to the audience, not to the visual aid
7 organizational patterns
chronological, spatial, categorical (topical), cause-effect, problem-solution, comparison-contrast, residues
Defining
clarifies a term of concept that is vague or troublesome
Discreteness (outline)
combines themes that would be clearer for your audience if they were developed one at a time
Links
connections from one idea to the next; some are subtle while others are explicit
Experiments
controlled tests of the effect of one thing on another; conducted by comparing situations that are essentially similar except for the factor being tested
Purpose of transitions
create the sense of movement
2 ways to plan your strategy
define your specific purpose; inform your audience
5 informative strategies
defining, reporting, describing, demonstrating, comparing
Comparison and Contrast
demonstrating its similarities and differences from other topics with which the audience is likely to be familiar
Logically independent ideas
does not require the truth of any other claim or statement as a condition for its own truth
Brief example
don't describe these in detail; they are important to your speech when used together to support your claim
Identifying with your audience
draw on something that you and the audience share - a common experience, common acquaintances, common values, or common goals.
Using an analogy
draws attention to the similarities or differences between two objects, events, or situations
Internal Summaries
draws together the central points that were discussed within the body of the speech or even within the discussion of one main idea, serving both to aid memory and to signal closure to those points
Categorical (Topical)
each main idea identified in analyzing your topic becomes a major division of the speech; no required order
Discreteness
each main idea should be separate from the others; ideas should not mix with one another
2 types of testimonies
factual testimony and opinion testimony
Internal preview
helps prepare the audience to follow along every time you introduce a new main idea
Simplicity
ideas should be stated simply
coordination
ideas with the same level of importance should be designated with the same symbol series
10 types of introductions
identifying with your audience; referring to the speech situation; stating your purpose; stating the importance of your topic; citing statistics, making claims; telling a story; using an analogy; asking a rhetorical question; quoting someone; using humor
Surveys and polls
infer the attitudes of people as a whole from the attitudes reported by a sample of the population, as long as the sample of representative of the whole
Testimony
information or an opinion that is expressed by someone other than the speaker
Parallel Structure
main ideas should be stated in a similar fashion when possible; sentences should have the same grammatical structure and should be of approximately the same length
Balance
main ideas should not be loaded towards one particular aspect of the subject
Completeness
main ideas taken together should present a complete view of the subject, omitting nothing of major importance
4 benefits of visual aids
make the speech more interesting; enhance the speaker's credibility; improve comprehension and retention; advance your argument in the speech
Describing
paints a mental picture
7 types of supporting materials
personal experience, common knowledge, direct observation, examples, documents, statistics, testimonies
Factual testimony
pieces of information that can be proved true or false; by quoting these, you are implying that you cannot verify the information yourself but are willing to accept it because you think the source is credible
Informative strategies
presume that a principal goal of the speech is to share the ideas with the audiences
Documents
primary sources that can establish a claim directly, without the need for opinion or speculation; a person's will is an example of this; can be a solid form of evidence if your audience regards them as trustworthy
3 ways to clarify your informative goal
provide new information on perspective, agenda setting, creating positive or negative feeling
Statement of topic, general purpose, specific purpose, and thesis
should be displayed above the outline; by keeping them in view, you can check the emerging plan against the goals it is designed to achieve
Oral citations
should provide enough citation to enable an audience member to evaluate the information and find it, should he or she choose
Rates of change
show what is happening and can help an audience compare the situation to a known benchmark
3 purposes of the conclusion
signal that the end is coming; summarize the main ideas; make a final appeal to the audience
Types of statistics
simple enumeration, surveys and polls, rates of change, experiments
6 characteristics of main ideas
simplicity, discreteness, parallel structure, balance, coherence, completeness
asking a rhetorical question
something that you do not expect listeners to answer
5 ways to outline the body of the speech
statement of topic, general purpose, specific purpose, and thesis; complete sentences; subordination; coordination; discreteness
Personal Experience
support your ideas on the basis of your own experience; it gains credibility and audience attention
subordination
supporting materials for a given idea should be outlined as indented under that idea
Statistics
supporting materials presented in quantitative form; numbers that record the extent of something or the frequency with which something occurs
Case Study
supports a general claim by zeroing in on one particular case and discussing it in detail
Main ideas
the claims that address the issues in your thesis statement, and they are the major divisions of the speech
Simple Enumeration
the most basic form of a statistic; can be difficult to interpret without more knowledge of the context
Chronological
the passage of time is the organizing principle in this pattern
Organization
the selection of ideas and materials and their arrangement into a discernible and effective pattern; helps the audience recall, use active listening, and have personal satisfaction
Coherence
the separate main ideas have a clear relationship and hang together to make listeners see why they appear in the same speech
Common knowledge
the understandings, beliefs, and values that members of a society or culture generally share; can be called "common sense"; often expressed in the form of maxims such as: "what happens here, stays here", "if you want something done right, do it yourself."; has the status of presumption - that is we consider it to be right until we are shown otherwise
4 purposes of the introduction
to gain the attention and interest of your audience; to influence the audience to view you and your topic favorably; to clarify the purpose or thesis of your speech; to preview the development of your topic
Stating your purpose
usually helps to clarify the point when an audience is captive or is known to already to be favorably disposed to your ideas
Problem-solution
variation of the cause-effect pattern; focuses on one first and then the answer to it
Encouraging retention
want the audience to retain the information in the speech
Agenda setting
wants to create awareness of a subject that listeners did not know about or think about before, thus putting it on the agenda of topics that warrant their concern
Citing statistics, making claims
works best when accurate but not well known - when there is a gap between what listeners think they know and what is actually the case
Direct Observation
you can support your claim on the basis of these simple things; not just a recollection of personal experience, can be verified by others
Examples
you make a general statement more meaningful by illustrating a specific instance of it