This is the general goal or intention of your informative speech.
What is to inform?
This is the goal or general purpose of your persuasive speech.
What is to persuade?
This nonverbal activity helps show confidence and energy while speaking.
What is body language?
This part of your speech introduced yourself and shared a memorable detail or fact.
What is a self introduction?
This is managed with practice, practice, and practice.
What is speaking anxiety
You can use newspapers, interviews, research articles, and websites to gather information.
What are the types of sources?
The five persuasive steps are attention, need, satisfaction, visualization, and action.
What is Monroe's Motivated Sequence?
This evaluates how well the audience observes and offers commentary about speakers' performances.
What is a peer listening evaluation?
This wraps up your ideas and leaves your audience with a final thought.
What is the conclusion?
Each in-class speech is planned and designated this quanity.
What is the allotted time of the speech?
These are used as powerful tools for informative and persuasive speeches when used properly.
What are facts and figures?
These are used as powerful tools for informative and persuasive speeches when appropriately used.
What are facts and figures?
This involves tone, pitch, and volume that impact the effectiveness of your delivery.
What is voice or vocals?
This list of sources is written in a particular style at the end of your outline.
What are references?
The informative, persuasive, and oral interpretation presentations required a limit of these to not overwhelm the audience, cause them to tune out, or cause the speaker to lessen their voice focus.
What are visuals?
A well-organized speech increases your chances of _______ your audience to educate or demonstrate or instrutct by making your message clear, memorable, and convincing.
What is informing?
A well-organized speech increases your chances of _______ your audience to change or to act by making your message clear, memorable, and convincing.
What is persuading?
This is a physical movement performed for a specific reason and has a particular meaning (e.g., adaptors, emblems, and illustrators).
What is a gesture?
This image, chart, or slide helps support your spoken words.
What is a visual?
The use of figurative language for the comparison of unlike things is often used to enliven the language of the speech.
What is a metaphor and a simile?
Human beings pursue several layers of needs that help create speech needs in informative speaking: physiological, safety, social, self-esteem, and self-actualization needs.
What are Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs?
Human beings pursue several layers of needs that help create speech needs in persuasive speaking: physiological, safety, social, self-esteem, and self-actualization needs.
What is Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs?
This is the most expressive part of the body that sets the emotional tone for your speech which you adjust according to the speech content.
What are facial expressions?
This is when you bring in a quote, statistic, or fact from your research into your speech.
What is integrating a research source?
This is a word-for-word, organized outline that precisely describes what the speaker plans to say.
What is a preparation outline?