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Category 5
100
What makes up the demographics, values, beliefs, & attitudes of an audience?
What is the components of audience analysis
100
How does one avoid plagiarism?
What is citing your sources
100
Can either be functional or disfunctional to your public speaking. An example of this is the "fight or flight response."
What is speech anxiety.
100
What is a communication process of converting, modifying, or maintaining the attitude, beliefs, or behavior of others.
What is persuasion
100
Define the three Aristotelian modes of proof
What is ethos [credibility], logos [logic to prove point], pathos [powerful motivators, emotional appeals]
200
This connects what you said and what you will say.
What is a transition
200
Maps, graphs, tables, drawings, and handouts
What are visual aids
200
What are competence, trustworthiness, dynamism, and composure
What are the primary dimensions of credibility? Competence [an audiences' perception of a speaker's knowledge and experience on a topic Trustworthiness [how truthful or honest an audiences perceives a speaker to be] Dynamism [enthusiasm and energy exhibited by a speaker] Composure [a speaker's emotional stability, confidence, and degree of control over him or herself when under stress]
200
Describe the three propositions of fact, value, and policy
What is fact alleges a truth, policy calls for significant change for how problems are handled, and value calls for a judgment that assesses the worth or merit of an idea, object, or practice.
200
What is the difference between informative and persuasive speaking?
Informative focuses on teaching the audience and persuasive focuses on changing the audience's opinion
300
What is necessary for an appropriate or effective oral citation?
What is the author, where it was published, the date used, or something about the source.
300
What are three ways to manage speech anxiety?
What is prepare and practice, gain proper perspective, speech classes, constructive self talk, positive self imaging, and relaxing techniques
300
Difference between oral and written styles of speech making.
What is oral styles is highly interactive, simpler sentences, and less formal. Written styles have delayed feedback, longer sentences, more formal, less interactive.
300
What should be considered when choosing a topic?
What is speaker, subject, and person addressed.
300
What is the overall goal of a speech and explains why you are giving it? Example - To inform.
What is the general purpose.
400
What is the organizational pattern organized by subjects?
What is topical
400
What are two guidelines for the competent usage of visual aids?
What is keep aids simple and visible, put the aides out of sight when not in use, practice with aides, don't circulate them, and anticipate problems
400
What elements of speech making are influenced by audience analysis?
What is preparation and presentation
400
What are the types or supporting material is used for sources?
What are examples, statistics, testimonies, and quotations.
400
How does eye contact help speeches?
What is it helps make it more personal and more confident
500
What are symbols, coherence, completeness, balance, and division?
What is the basic elements of a competent outline
500
What are the critical elements of a speech conclusion?
What is summarize the key ideas, refer to the introductions, and have a memorable finish
500
Explain the differences between the major delivery styles.
Manuscript - read from prompter Memorized Extemporaneous - outline styles Impromptu - without preparation
500
What are the criteria for evaluating supporting material?
What is credible, reliable, and sufficient.
500
What are the critical elements of a speech introduction?
What is gain attention, have a clear purpose statement, establish topic significance, establish credibility, preview the main points.
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