Chapter 1 - Speaking in Public
Chapter 5 - Selecting a Topic and Purpose
Chapter 7 - Gathering Materials
Chapter 8 - Supporting Your Ideas
Chapter 9 - Organizing Your Speech
100

Both speakers and listeners should avoid ___, the belief that one's group or culture is superior to all other groups or cultures.

Ethnocentrism

100

One way to identify a speech topic is through ___ - generating ideas by free association.

Brainstorming
100

As a speaker, you will likely draw information for your speeches from two broad areas: ___, and other people.

Yourself/your personal experiences

100

Name three types of supporting material a speaker might use in their speech.

Examples, statistics, and testimony

100

___ refers to organizing a speech in a way that achieves a particular result with a particular audience.

Strategic organization

200

___ is anxiety associated with speaking in front of others, while ___ is controlled nervousness that energizes a speaker for their presentation.

Stage fright/speech anxiety & positive nervousness

200

The general purpose is the broad goal of a speech: name the different types of general purposes a speech can have.

To inform, persuade, or entertain

200

___, such as Academic Search Premier, grant users easy access to a wide range of material from magazines, journals, and books.

Databases
200

Name three types of examples a speaker might include in their speech.

Brief, extended, and hypothetical

200

This is the number of main points a speech should have.

2 to 5 (2 or 3 is ideal)

300

Unlike conversation, public speaking is more highly structured, requires a different method of delivery, and ___. 

Requires more formal language

300

A speech's specific purpose should be a single ___ phrase that states what the speaker hopes to accomplish.

Infinitive

300

True or False/Explain: Wikipedia is a credible source that you should cite in your work.

False: Wikipedia can be a useful place to become familiar with a topic, but isn't the source you should cite

300

One specific type of statistic a speaker might use is the ___, or the average value of a group of numbers.

Mean

300

Most speeches use a ___ order - organizing main points into logical, consistent subtopics.

Topical

400

Like conversation, public speaking requires you to organize your thoughts logically, tailor your message to the audience, tell stories for maximum impact, and ___. 

Adapt to feedback

400

A speech's ___ is a one-sentence statement that encapsulates the major idea of the speech.

Central idea

400

When researching academic journal articles, it's helpful to read the ___ (a short summary of the article's scope and findings) before reading the entire article.

Abstract

400

Name three contexts or occasions when you should cite your sources in this class.

Outline (parenthetical/in-text and bibliography) & orally in your speech (PowerPoint citations optional)

400

"The first sport we will discuss is basketball, the second sport we will discuss is baseball, and the final sport we will discuss is football." The italicized parts of the sentence are examples of this type of connective.

Signposts

500

Name the seven components of the communication process.

Speaker, listener, message, channel, feedback, interference, & situation

500

"Ireland is a dope place to go on vacation" is an ineffective central idea because it uses ___ language.

Figurative

500

While researching her speech about the coronavirus pandemic, Michelle decides to include some articles she found that contain information from the CDC's web site. This is an example of a speaker evaluating the ___ of an Internet source.

Sponsorship

500

A newspaper article about potential COVID-19 treatments that quotes scientists and doctors is using ___, whereas an article that quotes people who have recovered from the virus is using ___.

Expert testimony and peer testimony

500

Henry is giving an informative speech about the different parts of the central nervous system, and how they interact with one another - this is an example of a speech using a ___ order.

Spatial

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