The side that argues in favor of the topic.
What is the affirmative side?
Giving information to listeners with the goal of having them pay attention and understand something new.
What is an informative speech?
A fallacy in which the author makes a conclusion based on a lack of evidence.
What is "Hasty Generalization"?
What are informative and persuasive speaking.
The citation format.
What is MLA style?
What is how LD debate got its name?
The type of speech that is on the spot without any preparation.
What is an impromptu speech?
A fallacy in which the author attacks the person make the opposing argument, rather than the argument itself.
What is an "ad hominem" fallacy?
The type of questions typically relate to this, in an extemporaneous speech.
What are current events?
Websites with the following: .org, .gov, and .edu.
What are credible sites?
Questioning and interviewing your opponent.
What is cross-examination?
Not your final version of a speech.
What is a rough draft?
A fallacy in which the author predicts events, usually with a catastrophic conclusion.
What is the "slippery slope" fallacy?
The format of an extemporaneous outline.
Introduction
Body 1
Body 2
Body 3
Researched Opinion
Conclusion
The part at the end of your research paper in which you list the sources used in the report.
What is a works cited page?
The last 4 speeches in an LD Debate.
What are the rebuttals?
A technique to draw your audience in.
What is an attention getter?
A fallacy in which the author attempts to distract the reader from the premise of the argument, often with emotional appeals.
What is a "red herring" fallacy?
**DAILY DOUBLE**
Find the main ideas of the following statement:
Should social media companies be held legally liable for content posted to their websites?
- Social Media Companies: Internet companies for posting social lives
- Legally Liable: held responsible under the eyes of the law.
- Content: Any media or text posted to a site
A source that has favor to one side of an argument over another.
What is a biased source?
The moral standpoint that you make in an LD debate.
What is the value and criterion?
Something an informative speech should NOT include.
Name that fallacy:
After Will said that we should put more money into health and education, Warren responded by saying that he was surprised that Will hates our country so much that he wants to leave it defenseless by cutting military spending.
What is a "straw man" fallacy?
What is "framing the question".
The citation used in your speech itself.
What is an in-text citation?