a severe fear of public speaking
Glossophobia
the outward characteristics of the audience
Demographic characteristics
the branch of philosophy that involves determinations of what is right and moral
Ethics
drawing conclusions about an object or phenomenon based on its similarities to something else
Analogical reasoning
Which student said, "that is the kind of impact AI has had on our daily lives?"
Amare Alexander
sharing meaning between two or more people
Communication
examining and looking at your audience first by its demographic characteristics and then by their internal psychological traits
Audience analysis
a false statement of fact that damages a person’s character, fame, or reputation
Defamatory Speech
an analogy where the two things under comparison are not essentially the same
Figurative analogy
Which student covered how the current generation is addicted to AI?
Cassandra Charles
direct or indirect messages sent from an audience (receivers) back to the original sender of the message
Feedback
generalizing about a group of people and assuming that because a few persons in that group have a characteristic, all of them do
Stereotyping
A speaker’s credibility at the beginning of or even before the speech
Initial Credibility
an analogy where the two things under comparison have sufficient or significant similarities to be compared fairly
Literal analogy
Which student went over the topic of good eggs and bad eggs.
Jacob McBride
the system of learned and shared symbols, language, values, and norms that distinguish one group of people from another
Culture
taking one characteristic of a group or person and making that the “totality” or sum total of what that person or group is
Totalizing
a speaker’s credibility at the end of the speech
Terminal Credibility
a type of reasoning in which examples or specific instances are used to supply strong evidence for (though not absolute proof of) the truth of the conclusion; the scientific method
Inductive reasoning
Who said "they're all unique and their different?"
Myiah Nickerson
a word, icon, picture, object, or number that is used to stand for or represent a concept, thing, or experience
Symbol
the inner characteristics of the audience; beliefs, attitudes, needs, and values
Psychographic Characteristics
a speaker’s credibility and trustworthiness (as judged by the audience members) throughout the process of the speech, which also can range from point to point in the speech
Derived Credibility
a form of inductive reasoning that draws conclusions based on recurring patterns or repeated observations
Generalization
Which student went over a book written by the author Angie Thomas?
Ja’Mya Nipple