Getting Started
Getting Organized
Getting Ready
Intro and Conclusion
Ready, Set, Go!
100
The qualities of being worthwhile, appropriate, culturally sensitive, and limited in scope are all required for "this" to be suitable.
What is a topic?
100
For your speech to be successful, you must do this in order to know your listeners and adapt your speech to them.
What is audience analysis?
100
In an informative speech, these primarily amplify (i.e., describe, illustrate, define, exemplify) the various concepts you discuss.
What are supporting materials?
100
A provocative statistic, a little-known fact, an interesting story, or a thought-provoking question can help you accomplish this first goal for your speech introduction.
What is getting your listeners' attention?
100
These help your speech flow by connecting your introduction to the body of your speech, connecting each main point to the next, and connecting the last point to your conclusion.
What are transitions?
200
This type of speech seeks to create understanding.
What is an informative speech?
200
This process will help you find information to use as source material in your speech, as well as help you persuade youe listeners and make you appear more believable.
What is research?
200
In a persuasive speech, these provide proof by offering evidence, argument and motivational appeal, and by establishing your credibility.
What are supporting materials?
200
Telling your audience why you're concerned with the topic and why you're competent to address will help you achieve this second goal for your speech introduction.
What is establishing a speaker-topic-audience connection?
200
Once you have prepared your speech, this should be done at least four times before your presentation.
What is rehearsal or practice?
300
This type of speech seeks to influence attitudes or behaviors.
What is a persuasive speech?
300
This process begins by examining what you know and then doing a general overview of your topic, and continues as consult increasingly specific sources.
What is research?
300
Doing this will help your audience understand and retain what you say; it often involves dividing your topic into its logical subtopics and then dividing your research according to these subtopics.
What is organization?
300
This will help you orient your audience and thus achieve the third goal for your speech introduction.
What is previewing the main points?
300
When called on to speak, approach the front of the room with this attitude.
What is enthusiasm?
400
This type of speech serves to introduce another speaker or group of speakers, present a tribute, secure the goodwill of the listeners, or entertain the audience.
What is a special occasion speech?
400
This is the one idea that you want your audience to remember after you have concluded your speech.
What is your thesis?
400
In your speech, these should be simple, concrete, personal, and informal.
What are words?
400
This is the first goal for your speech's conclusion.
What is restating your main points?
400
When called to speak and on reaching the front of the room, don't begin immediately but do this to engage your audience eye to eye for a moments.
What is pausing?
500
Examples for "this" type of purpose are "To inform," "To persuade," and "To entertain."
What is a speech's general purpose?
500
These are the component ideas that you use to clarify or support your the central idea of your speech.
What are the main points?
500
This will cause you to lose the conversational quality that is so important in public speaking.
What is writing out your speech word for word?
500
This is the second goal for your conclusion and is often accomplished through a crisp and memorable statement which makes it clear your speech is at an end.
What is wrapping up your speech?
500
Maintain this throughout your speech and with your entire audience, rather than concentrating on only a few people.
What is eye contact?
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