This document provides an overview of formal presentations, including Aristotle's three categories of speeches, the five cannons of rhetoric, topic selection, audience analysis, and conducting research. It discusses informative, persuasive, and commemorative speeches. Topic selection involves considering the purpose, occasion, audience, presenter's expertise, and scope. Audience analysis involves demographics, artifacts, informants, interviews, surveys, polling, and observation to understand interests and values. Research from peer-reviewed articles, books, magazines, newspapers, and websites enhances credibility.
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Chapter 13 Study Guide
This document provides an overview of formal presentations, including Aristotle's three categories of speeches, the five cannons of rhetoric, topic selection, audience analysis, and conducting research. It discusses informative, persuasive, and commemorative speeches. Topic selection involves considering the purpose, occasion, audience, presenter's expertise, and scope. Audience analysis involves demographics, artifacts, informants, interviews, surveys, polling, and observation to understand interests and values. Research from peer-reviewed articles, books, magazines, newspapers, and websites enhances credibility.
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Chapter 13: Nature of Formal Presentations
I. Aristotle identified three basic categories of speeches
A. Deliberative: involved speeches about future actions that might be taken. B. Forensic: included arguments about what had happened much like what you would find in a courtroom C. Epideictic: included speeches that celebrate or commemorate events or people. II. Aristotle also identified five cannons of rhetoric, or the five elements of creating and presenting a speech: A. Invention: identifying the topic on which you will speak. B. Arrangement: determining the order in which you will address points related to the topic. C. Style: the words and phrases you use to make the topic interesting. D. Delivery: the physical and vocal dimensions of speaking. E. Memory: remembering the entire speech (much more important during classical days than it is today). III. Topic selection: You should consider several questions when evaluating potential topics for your presentation. A. What is the General purpose of my speech? i. There are three primary types of general purposes, or overall reason for speaking: To inform, to persuade, to commemorate. a. In an informative speech, you are trying to teach your audience something. b. In a persuasive speech, you are trying to change or reinforce your audience’s attitudes, actions, or beliefs in some way. c. In a commemorative speech, you are usually celebrating or honoring something. B. What topics are appropriate for the occasion? i. When thinking about potential topics, take time to consider what types of topics might be appropriate or even expected for the occasion. ii. Audiences typically expect certain topics to be addressed on particular occasions. iii. For example, you would expect a commencement speech to have a theme of hopes and dreams and for a toast at a wedding to include anecdotes about the bride and groom. C. Is the topic appropriate for this particular audience? i. You should consider your audience’s interests, needs, and level of expertise when choosing your topic, and consider how those mesh with the occasion. ii. Instead, you should consider what topics will be of interest to, connect with, and build upon an audience’s existing knowledge in some way. D. Is the topic appropriate for me? i. You will spend a significant amount of time thinking about, researching, practicing, and delivering your speech, so you should make sure that the topic is one that you care enough about to invest what will be a lot of time and work. ii. Some questions to ask yourself include: Is this topic something that you care about?, Is it a subject in which you are an expert, or about which you would like to know more?, Is the topic choice one that reflects the person you want to be seen as? E. Is this topic narrow enough? i. You will need to narrow your topic to make sure that you can adequately explain your subject matter in the amount of time you have available ii. Brainstorming can be a helpful way to narrow your topic. This works by creating a list of all of the possible topics you can think of, beginning by writing down every possible idea that comes to mind, regardless of how good you think the idea is, and then afterward organizing or evaluating the ideas to help you make a decision about which to choose. iii. Another strategy used to narrow your focus is a concept map. This is a visual representation of all of the potential areas you could cover in your speech that includes circles around topics and lines that connect related ideas; also known as a mind map. IV. Audience analysis and adaptation: Process of examining information about the listeners. Analysis helps you adapt your message so that the listeners will respond accordingly. V. There are seven different ways you can analyze an audience: A. Demographics are categories of definable characteristics of groups of people, such: age, gender, culture, ethnicity, race, religion, political affiliation, socioeconomic status, education level, and sexual orientation. i. As a speaker, knowing something about your audience’s demographic makeup might give you some general ideas about your audience’s likely experiences, expectations, beliefs, values, behaviors, and habits. B. Artifacts: objects that indicate something about the values, beliefs, practices, history, and norms of a group of people. i. If you are giving a speech in class, you might examine what your classmates wear, what they talk about, and what kinds of objects they carry with them, and then consider what those things communicate about your classmates’ interests and values. C. Informants: An informant is a contact person within the organization or group from whom you can obtain information about your audience. i. Informants can be used when you do not know much about your audience. D. Interviews: In the event that you do not have a contact person, you might want to consider asking the person arranging the speech to put you in touch with a few potential members of the audience so that you can interview them. i. This information can be enormously helpful in tailoring your message to the particular audience you will address. E. Surveys: can help you gather demographic data as well as information about people’s attitudes regarding specific issues. i. If you have enough time before your presentation, and have the ability to reach each audience member, you can send your audience a survey. ii. There are a few different types of questions that are well suited for a survey: a. Likert scale questions that give statements and then ask respondents to circle a number that measures their level of agreement with it, b. semantic differential scale questions that ask participants to choose their position on a continuum between two polar opposites, or c. open-ended questions that allow audience members to give more elaborate written responses to a question. F. Polling the audience: you can informally poll your audience by asking a question, or even several questions, during your speech. This can be an especially effective strategy that will help you capture your audience’s attention during the beginning of your speech while also learning something about them that you can then use later in your presentation. G. Direct observation: During your speech, you will also be able to see your audience’s nonverbal feedback, which will provide cues about how they react to specific aspects of your message (For example, audience members may nod their heads or make eye contact or, use their cell phones or fall asleep). VI. Conducting research: Incorporating and citing research throughout your speech enhances your ability to connect with an audience because it increases your credibility as a speaker and substantiates the claims you make. A. Sources of information i. Peer-reviewed academic journal articles: original research studies typically published in academic journals that you can find in your university or college library. a. These articles undergo a rigorous review process, so can provide some of the most reliable, up-to-date information, but will also usually be written with a high level of specific detail given that they are intended primarily for other experts and researchers. ii. Books: a. Can be extended research reports that investigate a topic in depth; a textbook that provides history, background information, and overviews; stories about individuals who went through a particular experience or contain completely fictional account. b. Typically, nonfiction research-based books or textbooks will be the most useful sources of evidence when you are preparing a speech, but you might find a good narrative or example in fiction books that will add some color to your presentation. iii. Magazines and newspapers: intended for more general audiences than academic journals and rely heavily on subscribers and advertisers to maintain profits. iv. Web and media sources: Websites and media sources such as television shows, radio programs, documentaries, and movies can be good sources of quality information, but can also be highly unreliable. a. Generally, websites ending in .gov and .edu are more reliable than websites ending in .com, .org, or .net. v. Interviews with an expert or a peer a. An expert might be a professor who does research or teaches about the subject, or someone who has professional experience related to your topic. b. Peers provide a different type of information than an expert can, but the stories shared by peers can help your audience better understand how your topic impacts others’ everyday experiences. B. Types of supporting evidence i. Numbers/Statistics: Numbers report raw quantitative data, whereas statistics summarize and organize sets of data to make them easier to understand and visualize. a. Statistics might include ratios, percentages, fractions, averages, standard deviations, or other calculations that make it easier to understand the overall impact of the data. b. Numbers and statistics can be especially valuable for showing the extent of a problem or the likelihood that your audience will be impacted by an issue. ii. Examples are instances that we use to help define or clarify concepts, draw attention to a particular feature of an experience, or elicit memories and emotions in our audience; can be brief, extended, real, or hypothetical. iii. Testimony: involves using the words of other people to support your point. a. Expert testimony is information that you obtain from someone who conducts extensive research on the topic, has significant experience with the topic, or holds a position that lends credibility to his or her ideas on a subject. b. Peer testimony is information that comes from someone who is in the same peer group as the audience, and who is not necessarily an expert on the topic. iv. Definitions: it can be helpful to include definitions in your speech if you are using terms that your audience is unfamiliar with. You can choose to provide the denotative or connotative meaning of the word or phrase. C. Evaluating information i. How recent is the source? Typically, more recent sources will have more up-to-date, useful information. ii. Is the source in a position to know the information? If the person or organization that provided the information to the source is an expert on the specific subject, then they are probably a reliable source. iii. Is the source biased? If your source will gain financially, or in some other way, from convincing you to adopt a particular perspective or to purchase a particular product, you should take that bias into account when determining whether to use the information iv. Is the information consistent with other sources? If you have a half dozen sources that meet the previous criteria for being credible sources, and one of the sources contradicts the other five sources, it is probable that the five consistent sources are accurate, not the single source that contradicts them. VII. Dialogic public speaking A. Identify with your audience: Demonstrate early in the speech that you tried to understand the topic from their perspective B. Respect differences: Even among a particular demographic group there are differences in attitudes and values, so do not make the presumption that they all know or believe something just because they are members of a certain group C. Keep an open mind: Even though you may believe you know what you want to say, the evidence may take you elsewhere. Search unbiased sources first, then look to those that might be supportive of and those that may disagree with your position. D. Strive for understanding: Help your audience understand things the way you do, rather than force them to be convinced by quantity. E. Talk with, not at your audience: An effective speech retains a conversational quality that invites follow-up comments and questions when it is done.
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