Sweet Persuasion
Reason for the Season
Baggage Claim
Getting Organized
Assign of the Times
100

This is the structure of reasoning, sometimes synonymous with logos. 

What is logic? 

100

This is the ability to make an inference or decision based on evidence. 

What is reasoning? 

100

This is the basic element of the argument; an assertion about something. 

What is a claim? 

100

This public speaking teacher came up with the famous "motivated sequence" of persuasive organization.

Who is Alan Monroe? 

100

The persuasive speech in this class will fall within this time range.

What is 6-8 minutes? 

200

This is an appeal supported by facts or evidence. 

What is an argument? 

200

This type of logic describes the study of how people argue on an everyday basis while leaving some things unstated. 

What is informal logic? 

200

This type of claim asserts whether something is good or bad, or makes some type of judgment about the topic. 

What is a claim of value? 

200

Monroe's motivated sequence and problem-solution are two examples of organizational structures when arguing a claim of this type. 

What is a claim of policy? 

200

At least one of the five sources required for the persuasive speech must address this. 

What is the counterargument? 

300

This is simply a request for your audience to do something. It may or may not have logical reasoning behind it. 

What is an appeal? 

300

"Penguins are flightless birds; Bob is a penguin; therefore Bob is a flightless bird" is an example of this type of reasoning. 

What is deductive reasoning? 

300

This type of claim states that something should or should not happen.

What is a claim of policy? 

300

This fourth step in Monroe's motivated sequence helps the audience imagine the outcome. 

What is visualization? 

300

Before the final statement, this request for the audience to do something must be present in the persuasive conclusion. 

What is a call to action? 

400

This is an argument that leaves a part unsaid or unstated, such as a joke or meme; it's funny because the audience fills in the missing piece. 

What is an enthymeme? 

400

Leaves are falling; it's getting colder; it's September; therefore, it must be fall - this is an example of this type of reasoning. 

What is inductive reasoning? 

400

This type of claim asserts that something is true or false. 

What is a claim of fact? 

400

This more commonly used type of persuasive structure presents a need and proposes an answer. 

What is problem-solution? 

400

This is another word the rubric uses for "solution." 

What is satisfaction? 

500

Philosopher Stephen Toulmin developed a horizontal model of argumentative structure that consists of a claim, evidence, and this familiar police term. 

What is a warrant? 

500

This is a three-part argument and type of deductive reasoning illustrated by Aristotle that contains a major premise, a minor premise, and a conclusion

What is a syllogism? 

500

"Cafe Diem is the best coffee shop in Ames" is this type of claim.

What is a claim of value? 

500

In this type of organizational pattern, the speaker tries to persuade the audience by addressing opposing claims. 

What is persuading with refutation? 

500

In this category of the rubric, the speaker articulates why the solution will work to address the problem. 

What is feasibility?