Sometimes persuasive speeches are organized by categories.
What is the topical organizational pattern?
This contends that a statement about people, objects, or events is true and verifiable.
What is claim of fact?
This appeal has to do with a speakers credibility.
What is ethos?
Inductive reasoning fallacy that occurs when too few examples are cited to warrant a conclusion.
What is a hasty generalization?
When giving a speech, we should remember to cite our references during the speech.
What are oral citations?
When organizing our speeches, we should remember to use these "bridges" between our main points.
What are transitions?
This identifies what is right or wrong in a particular situation.
What is claim of value?
This is an appeal to someones emotions, causing audience members to feel something while listening to you.
What is pathos?
Fallacy that occurs when a person making an argument doesn’t have the knowledge or qualifications to be credible but is perceived as credible because they are respected or admired.
What is a false authority?
When we adjust our volume, rate, and pitch during a speech, we are doing this.
What is vocal variation?
Speeches should have an introduction, body, and conclusion.
What is speech structure?
This makes statements about the future.
What is claim of conjecture?
This appeal relies on a well-crafted claims that are reasonable and sensible.
What is logos?
Fallacy that relies on arguing for a course of action or belief because it is commonly done or held.
What is a bandwagon?
Maintaining this with our audience 90% of the time is the goal when giving a public speech.
What is eye contact?
Organization a speech using the problem, cause, solution organizational pattern is common with this type of persuasive speech. Hint, it is not a dispositional persuasive speech.
What is an actuation persuasive speech?
This proposes a course of action.
What is claim of policy?
To assist in establishing logos a speaker with use compelling arguments to help support their claims with relevant and valid....examples include facts, statistics, definitions, examples.
What are supporting materials?
Fallacy that occurs when a speaker attacks another person rather than his or her argument.
What is Ad hominem?
This included everything but the actual spoken word.
What is nonverbal communication?
This organizational pattern includes 5 steps, which include the attention step, need step, satisfaction step, visualization step, and action step.
What is Monroe's motivated sequence?
A "claim" is the conclusion of a persuasive argument-it states what you want your audience to believe and/or do.
What is a claim?
The emotions that we try to get our audience to experience may either be positive or negative.
What is pathos?
Fallacy that results when a speaker argues that something should continue because “it’s the way things have been done before.”
What is appeal to tradition?
We should do this with our ears when being an audience member during a public speech.
What is mindful listening?