The study of what teaches you not what to think, but how to think.
What is public speaking?
100
Honesty is very important before you present a speech. Passing off ideas, words or created works of another as ones own is a description of this.
What is plagiarism?
100
Public speaking is rooted in what we refer to as this.
What is rhetorical tradition?
100
Everything you say and do to convey good character and competence.
What are ethos?
200
Those who interpret the messages sent by others.
Who are receivers?
200
This empowers you to participate in democratic processes and is the hallmark in democracy.
What is free speech?
200
Public speakers that practice what they preach display this trait.
What is integrity?
200
A place where the speaker, audience and occasion overlap.
What is rhetorical situation?
200
This aspect allows for clarification, explanation and it supports your main ideas.
What is evidence?
300
Messages sent by receivers intended to let the sender know how the receiver understood the original message.
What are feedback messages?
300
This skill is one of the most highly sought-after skill when employers go to hire.
What is oral communication?
300
An audience member demonstrates this as he or she gives the speaker their undivided attention.
What is respectfulness?
300
As a speaker, what you discuss and the language you use to express those ideas depends on these topics.
What are interests, beliefs, background and level of public speaking?
300
The overall framework you use to organize your speech content.
What is macrostructure?
400
Communication with yourself (aka self-talk).
What is Intrapersonal communication?
400
When you feel that the teacher is "talking over your head", this public speaking skill will empower you to be able to do this with your audience.
What is to communicate complex ideas and information?
400
Researching and reporting all sides of a particular issue even though some of the information may be contradictory demonstrates this speaking skill.
What is fairness?
400
A study created to learn about the diverse characteristics of the audience members as well as predict how they are apt to listen, be motivated and act, given a particular speech.
What is audience analysis?
400
The specific style and language choices you would use as you frame your ideas and verbalize them to the audience.
What is microstructure?
500
The route a message travels and the means of transportation.
What are channels?
500
These two terms equip you to analyze messages offered by those around you.
What is thinking critically and behaving ethically?
500
Being accountable for your words means that you as a speaker obtain this trait.
What is responsibility?
500
This factor can play a large role in the manner in which you present your speech.
What is the location or layout?
500
Emotional convictions, speaking more quickly and loudly, stressing keywords and pausing to grab the audiences attention are all examples of this.