Components & Styles of Comm.
Nonverbal Comm.
The Research Process
Pitching and Rhetorical Devices
Investigative Journalism
Impressions
Fame and Imitations
Journalistic Critiques
100

This is the term for the person who is given information in a communication.

What is the receiver?

100

Nonverbal Communication is defined as communicating without the use of this important element of communication.

What are words?

100

This step in the research process requires you to form an essential question.

What is step three (3): Questioning?

100

This is a Rhetorical Device used to appeal to your audience’s emotions.

What is Pathos?

100
Rather than focusing on the symptoms of a problem, Investigative Journalism attempts to identify this aspect of an issue through research and data collection.

What is the Root Cause?

100

This term describes how high or low someone’s voice is.

What is Pitch of Speech?

100

This is the term for how someone looks and chooses to present themselves.

What is Physical Presentation?

100

This golden rule can help a critic provide the most useful feedback to another.

What is putting yourself in the others' shoes, or "treating others the way you would like to be treated"?

200

This connection describes the link between Messages and Channels as components of communication.

What is the message is the content and the channel is the way that message gets to the receiver?

200

Miscommunications often occur in communication when these two types of communication do not align.

What are Nonverbal and Verbal Communication?

200

These two things should always be considered when delivering research data to an audience.

What is Identity (who they are; i.e. age, level of education, etc.) and Expectations (i.e. occasion, purpose, speciality, etc.)?

200

This is using the speaker's credibility to convince the audience of a claim's validity.

What is Ethos?

200

These two elements of investigative journalism can serve as evidence to support the findings of the investigation.

What are Photographs and Interviews?

200

PLUS POINTS JEOPARDY:

LIST THE NAMES OF 5 Harry Potter CHARACTERS IN YOUR BEST BRITISH ACCENT!

TEACHER ACCEPTED ANSWER

>.<

200

This term refers to a part of someone’s background detailing how many people were in their household, who worked, who stayed home, and generally how they were raised.

What are Family Dynamics?

200

Before providing feedback to a writer/producer, critics should always do this.

What is review and edit their feedback?

300

These three elements of communication make it more difficult for sources to deliver their exact message to its audience.

What are environment, context, and interference?

300

DOUBLE JEOPARDY:

This term, mentioned in Mr. O'Neill's presentation on Nonverbal Communication, describes a form of language/communication that occurs when words remain unchanged, regardless of tone or occasion; i.e. National Anthems, Legal Documents, or Ritual Texts.

What is Frozen Language?

300

These three methods can be used to mention the sources identified during the research process.

What are Hyperlinking, Quoting, and Citing?
300

This is a question asked to persuade/subtly influence the audience and does not require an answer.

What are Rhetorical Questions?

300

These are the three (3) ways that a interviewee can provide perspective on an issue.

What are witnessing (evidence), protesting (emotion), and solving (expertise)?

300

This term describes the quality of a person's speech and is often considered a combination of the simpler aspects of speech.

What is Tone?
300

While widely impacted by the conditions of ones' upbringing, these aspects are the biggest indicators of compatibility within communities, occupations, and relationships, as well as many other aspects of life.

What are Personality Traits?

300

When providing a critique, generally complimenting a piece can create more issues than doing this.

What is being specific about what works and what doesn't?

400

One of these four Styles of Communication may describe the differences in your preferences as a communicator and a receiver of information.

What are Energizer, or Systemizer, or Associator, or Innovator?

400

These four modes of nonverbal communication help express messages without the use of words.

What are Facial Expressions, Gestures, Body Language, and Tone of voice?

400

These six steps must be completed, and often repeated, in the Research process.

What are:

Identifying a Topic

Taking a Stance

Questioning 

Planning (Research Design)

Identifying and Evaluating Sources

Presenting/Pitching Findings

400

This vital aspect of crafting a pitch, revolves around explaining what your audience stands to gain or lose by siding with or against the pitcher.

What are Defining the Stakes?

400

This is the term for a pseudonym or "nickname", given to interviewees to maintain their anonymity.

What is a moniker?

400

This aspect of Impressions can be some of the most simple to recreate, but can completely change the "vibe" of an impression as they heavily impact the perception of a character.

What are Nonverbal Cues?

400

This aspect of imitation includes how a person speaks, reacts, moves, as well as any quirks or habits they frequently display.

What are Behavioral Traits?

400

While being detailed in your feedback is necessary, when you discover a "problem" in someone's writing, you should never try to tell a writer how to do this.

What is telling someone what they "should do" to "fix" their work?

500

List all eight (8) components of communication and describe one (1) of them.

What is Source, Message, Channel, Receiver, Feedback, Environment, Context, Interference (Teacher accepted description)?

500

Though founded on an ill-conceived and misrepresented statistic, it is believed that this percentage of communication is Non-verbal.

What is around 93%?

500

Of the many stages in the Stanford Human-Centered Design Model, several closely relate to the Research Process. This phrase can be used to describe the broadening and constricting of both processes.

What is "Wide, Narrow, Wide, Narrow, GO!"?

500

This technique, otherwise known as "Oppositional Thinking" or "Playing Devil's Advocate", requires you to analyze the flaws in your own argument and provide an impactful resolution.

What are Counter Argument(s) and Rebuttal(s)?

500

This term is used to describe the dramatic way journalists title their work to grab attention, hook, and maintain the interest of their audiences.

What is Sensationalism/Sensationalizing?

Alternatively: What are Sensational Headlines/Subheadings?

500

This is the term used to describe the amount and placement of emphasis in spoken phrasing.

What is inflection?

500

Often occurring after the completion of high school, these important life choices and experiences can have some of the biggest impacts on how everyone, from plebs to celebrities, develop themselves and the world around them.

What are Education and Career Paths?

500

It is, arguably, most important to remember this when receiving feedback from a critic, especially when it pertains to personal materials or those you have high stakes in.

What is "feedback and revisions must serve your goals for the piece"?

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