The first speech of a legislative session is
The authorship
This is how long you have to prepare your speech
You can only do this during the introduction
Look at/touch your partner
This is the part of the introduction where you tell the audience what points you're trying to make
Roadmap
The amount of times you should use a logical fallacy in a speech.
This is the part of your speech that explains and links data to your claim
These are the three types of questions
predictive, prescriptive, and evaluative.
These are three main sources you can use for scripts
Books, plays, movies
These issues are what your speech should be discussing
Social issues
Slippery slope
The second speech of the legislative session has how many minutes of cross examination
Two minutes
The second section of the intro does what?
Links AGD to topic
The introduction should be at least
30 seconds long
This part of the speech captures the attention of the audience
AGD
"My opponent states that we should cut taxes, but she doesn't know any better because she's a spoiled princess" is an example of
Ad hominem
The motion that begins the vote on legislation is
"motion to move to previous question"
What part of the speech do you need to have memorized
The question
This is what you call your movements throughout the performance
blocking
This part of the speech contains factual information to help give substance to your ideas
significant statement
"I drank from that water fountain, and now I have diarrhea. That water fountain is poisoned" is an example of
false cause
The final speech of the round that summarizes all of the arguments
crystallization
You should have at least this many data points per contention/area of analysis
Two
These two things must be in your introduction
Title and author
These are the two types of structures we learned this year...
Problem Cause Solution & Cause Effect Solution
"We shouldn't buy iPhones because they're made in China, and that supports their Communist ideology"
Genetic fallacy