Transitions, Internal previews, Internal summaries and Signposts are the four types of these.
What are connectives?
This allows a public speaker to see the full scope and content of their speech at a glance and to judge whether each part of the speech is fully developed and whether the main points are properly balanced.
Why is an outline is important in preparing a speech?
Prepare these in advance using simple images that are large enough with a limited amount of text.
What are visual aids?
Strongly opposed, moderately opposes, slightly opposes, neutral, slightly in favor, moderately in favor, and strongly in favor comprise this concept in public speaking.
What are the degrees of persuasion?
Attention, need, satisfaction, visualization and action are the five parts of this public speaking strategy.
What is Monroe's Motivated Sequence?
This is the part of the speech when a public speaker shares and explains their main points.
Stating the specific purpose, identifying the central idea and labeling the introduction, body, and conclusion.
What are the guidelines for preparing an outline?
Doing this gives a public speaker time and resources to devise creative, attractive visual aids that can also be used to practice delivering their speech.
What are preparing visual aids in advance?
This is the part of the audience that you want to reach with your speech.
What is the target audience?
Credibility, evidence, reasoning and emotions are four reasons of this when the audience listens to a public speaker.
What is persuasion?
This is the section of the speech when a public speaker gets the audience's attention, reveals the topic of the speech and attempts to establish credibility and goodwill.
What is the introduction?
What you plan to accomplish in your speech is called this.
What is the specific purpose?
Visual aids should only be discussed during a speech when this is happening.
What is only when the speaker is discussing what the visual aid is.
These are questions that cannot be answered absolutely. They are neither right nor wrong. There is a true answer, but we don’t have enough information to know what it is.
What are questions of fact?
Competence and character are the two factors of this.
What is credibility?
Relating your topic, arousing the curiosity, questioning and startling this group of people are the best ways to get them interested in your speech.
What is the audience?
This is what you plan to accomplish in your speech.
What is the central idea?
Public speakers should talk to this group, not their visual aid, while delivering a speech.
What is the audience?
These are questions that involve matters of fact and demand value judgments (based on a person’s beliefs about what is right or wrong, good or bad, moral or immoral, proper or improper, fair or unfair).
What are questions of value?
This is the process of drawing a conclusion based on evidence in public speaking/ It must be sound and speakers must try to get listeners to agree with it.
What is reasoning?
This is the section of the speech when a public speaker can summarize their speech, use a quotation or make a dramatic statement.
What is the conclusion?
This type of outline allows a public speaker to see instantly where they are in the speech at any given moment while they are speaking.
What is a speaking outline?
Public speakers need to do this after arriving at the speech venue to make sure their visual aids will work.
What is check the venue's space and equipment?
These are questions that deal with specific courses of action.
What are questions of policy?
Hasty Generalization, False Cause, Invalid Analogy, Bandwagon, Red Herring, Ad Hominem, Either-Or, Slippery Slope, Appeal to Tradition and Appeal to Novelty are each a type of this in public speaking.
What is a fallacy?