A sustained formal presentation by a speaker to an audience
Public Speaking
Passing off the ideas, words, or created works of another as one's own by failing to credit the source
Plagiarism
the verbal utterances, visual images, and nonverbal behaviors used to convey thoughts and feelings
messages
some real or perceived need that might help address
exigence
statements that verbally summarize one main point in a speech and introduce the next one
transitions
Public speaking knowledge and skills are fundamental to participating effectively in a democratic society regardless of major or profession
Liberal Art
Moral principles that a society, group, or individual hold that differentiate right from wrong and good behavior from bad
Ethics
Consists of the reactions and responses sent by the receivers to let the sender know how the message is being interpreted
Feedback
The process of tailoring your message to address exigence in terms of their unique interests, needs, and expectations
audience adaptation
How you use your voice and body to present your message
Delivery
Civic rights
Ethical communicators
are honest, act with integrity, Behave fairly, demonstrate respect, and are responsible.
Participants form and transmit messages using verbal symbols and nonverbal behaviors
senders
everything you say and do to convey competence and good character
ethos
the overall organizational framework you use to present your speech content
macrostructure
Interpret the messages sent by others
Receivers
everything you say and do to appeal to logic and sound reasoning
logos
the specific language and style you use within the sentences of your speech
microstructure
refers to the environment in which communication occurs
communication context
the information and ideas presented in the speech
content
The framework that organize the speech content
structure