The first line of your speech
What is an attention getter?
Three of your sources are required to be this
What are scholarly sources?
Um, uh, so, and
What are vocal fillers?
A speaker balances these three things to appeal to diverse audiences
What is ethos, pathos, logos?
Signals moving to a new point or section of your speech?
What are transitions?
Format for citations required in this class
Important physical movement to connect with audience and hold attention
What is eye contact?
Use of descriptive words and phrases that create clear, strong mental images and evoke sensory experiences for the reader or listener
What is vivid language?
States your main argument
What is a thesis statement?
Sources that are available to everyone
What are non-scholarly sources?
Something you should not rest your hands on during your speech
What is the podium?
Argument structure
What is claim, evidence, warrant?
Required page in your outline
What is the reference page?
Location for students to access articles and research
What is KU Libraries?
Required for your persuasive speech to aid audience comprehension
What is a visual aid?
Arguments that are not strong or based in logic, often manipulative and avoidant
What is a logical fallacy?
Included after a direct quote or summarization from another source
What are in-text citations?
Verifying a source through researching the author, checking multiple sources and evaluating credibility
What is lateral reading?
Speaking with minimal notes
What is extemporaneous speaking?
Addressing counter arguments
What is refutation?