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Chapter 16 Speeches to Inform

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Chapter 16 Speeches to Inform Obviously, a man s judgment cannot be better than the information on which he has based it. Arthur Hays Sultzberger ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 16 Speeches to Inform


1
Chapter 16Speeches to Inform
  • Obviously, a mans judgment cannot be better
    than the information on which he has based it.
  • Arthur Hays Sultzberger, publisher New York
    Times

2
Types of Informative Speeches
  • Public Lecture
  • Status Report
  • Briefing
  • Fireside Chat
  • Chalk Talk

3
Types of Informative Speeches
  • Public Lecture
  • Special interest or expertise, invited to speak
  • Conventions, Organizations
  • Status Report
  • Update on project
  • Business and social groups

4
Types of Informative Speeches
  • Briefing
  • Changes in policy or procedure
  • Coaches, editors, politicians
  • Fireside Chats
  • Addressing concerns
  • FDR, can be used by heads of organizations to
    discuss policies and goals
  • Chalk Talk
  • Use visual aids to give directions
  • Coaches, directors with blocking, drivers ed

5
What may follow Informative Speeches?
  • Question and answer period

6
The Six Cs of Informative Speaking
1
  • Be Clear
  • Will everyone understand?
  • Be Concise
  • Will I waste anyones time?
  • Be Complete
  • Have I defined the major points (advance
    organizers)?
  • Be Correct
  • Have I checked facts?
  • Be Concrete
  • Do I have examples?
  • Connect
  • Will my audience relate?

2
3
4
5
6
7
Finding a Subject
  • Personal Experience
  • You are an expert on something
  • Observations
  • Read, attend a meeting, interview
  • Surveys
  • Find out what people want to know
  • Then narrow

8
How to Narrow
  • Time - period
  • Space - geography
  • Extent covered
  • Divide - single elements

9
How to Narrow a Thesis
  • Thesis is the goal of a speech or the thought
    on which the speech is based
  • Examples
  • Teenagers and Fads
  • Slang used often comes from movies.
  • Healthy lifestyles
  • Eating five servings of fruits and vegetables
    reduces chances of getting cancer.
  • Famous Musicians
  • Beethovens hearing loss may have helped him
    compose.

10
Supporting the Thesis
  • Use Facts
  • Statistics
  • Evidence
  • Also use
  • Anecdotes
  • Quotations
  • Definitions
  • Descriptions

11
Audio and Visual Aids
  • Sight is our most dominant sense.
  • We pay 25 times as much attention to visual
    information
  • than to other types.

12
Two-Dimensional Aids
  • Charts
  • Diagrams
  • Maps
  • Graphs
  • Drawings
  • Photographs
  • Cartoons

13
Specific Purpose
  • Chart
  • List information
  • Diagram
  • Show how something works
  • Map
  • Show routes, locations, relationships
  • Graphs
  • Make numbers tangible - show relationships in
    data
  • Drawings, Photos and Cartoons
  • Pictures are worth a thousand words

14
Means of Developing
  • Chalkboard
  • Weakness is you turn your back and quality
  • Handouts
  • Weakness is the distraction
  • Projections
  • Overhead - weakness is quality, noise, and cant
    build
  • Slides/Powerpoint - Vivid, professional, but can
    be overused with too many and dark slides
    require a dark room
  • Video
  • Create your own or use a clip, but can make an
    awkward break

15
Three-Dimensional Aids
  • Models
  • Cutaways
  • Just use them!
  • And Sound Recordings

16
Guidelines for Using Aids
  • Large enough
  • Master mechanics
  • Make sure it contributes
  • Dont stand in front of it
  • Talk to audience not visual
  • Keep out of sight until ready to use
  • Dont over do
  • Make sure you have backup
  • Practice, practice, practice

17
Recalling the Facts
  • Why are each of the 6 Cs of informative
    speaking important?
  • Why is it often difficult to imagine what our
    listeners are thinking?
  • Where can you get ideas about what subject to
    speak on?
  • Why is it important to narrow your topic?
  • What will help you decide what material belongs
    in your speech and what doesnt?
  • What purpose do audio/visual aids serve?
  • What are some guidelines for using visual aids?

Look Back on Page 467 of textbook
18
Vocabulary
  • public lecture
  • status report
  • Briefing
  • fireside chat
  • chalk talk
  • advance organizer
  • cultural literacy
  • Narrowing
  • thesis
  • anecdote
  • quotation
  • definition
  • map
  • diagram
  • graph
  • handout
  • overhead projector
  • model
  • cutaway

Speech terms page 437 in textbook
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