Nature of Persuasive Speech
Nature of Persuasion
Tailoring your Message
Ethical Persuasion
Organizing your Speech
100

In this type of speech, your goal is to influence the Audience Members beliefs, attitudes, or actions, and to advocate fact, value or policy claims.

Persuasive Speech

100

There are this many paths to persuasion.

2

100

The process of supporting arguments that will best persuade the audience in an ethical manner.

Strategic Discourse

100

This means the acknowledgement of of any potential conflicts of interest in a topic before a speaker presents his or her arguments.

Full disclosure

100

This pattern can be used for fact claims to represent how one thing causes another.

Causal Pattern

200

If audience members already agree with your perspective, you may try to do this.

Strengthen Audience Commitment

200

Those who follow this route do not actively process your message.

Peripheral Route

200

This theory states that audience members make a decision about your thesis by comparing it with their own perspectives.

Social Judgment Theory

200

You want your audience members to accept your thesis, but you should earn their support with this persuasion.

Honest

200

This patter can be used to organize value claims to show that two situations are similar or different.

Comparison Claim

300

If audience members disagree with your perspective on an issue, you may attempt to do this.

Weaken Audience Commitment

300

Those who follow this route have a mental process that involves actively processing a speaker's argument.

Central Route

300

You are more likely to persuade an audience to challenge their minds if the position you take on your topic falls within this.

Their latitude of acceptance

300

When presenting ideas that you found from other sources, be sure to do this.

Include citations

300

This pattern can be used to organize value claims to 

A. Establish standards for the value judgment

B. Applies those standards to the subject of your thesis

Criteria-Application Patter

400

This type of claim asserts something is true.

Fact Claim

400

This model shows two ways that audience members may evaluate a persuasive speaker's message according to two routes- the central and peripheral.

Elaboration Likelihood Model

400

If your position falls within your audience's latitude of rejection and you audience has very strong viewpoints that differ from yours, you may produce this where your listener will oppose your idea even more.

Boomerang Effect

400

You can address counterarguments to your position by using this.

A two-sided argument

400

This pattern can be used to organize policy claims and establishes 5 main points: Attention, Need, Satisfaction, Visualization, and Action

Motivated Sequence

500

This type of claim attaches judgment to a subject.

Value Claim

500

Your members will be more likely to take a central route when your topic is this to them.

Relevant or important

500

You should consider this because your audience may be having trouble meeting their basic needs.

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs

500

To persuade ethically, present these that support your thesis.

Solid, truthful claims

500

This type of pattern is used to organize policy claims and can be used to ask the audience to support a policy change by organization or institution.Your ultimate goal is new behavior on the part of the organization or institution.

Problem-Cause-Solution Pattern