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27 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
An engine that provides academic and published sources
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What is a Database
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When the person you are interviewing answers a question with a yes or no. |
What is Closed-Ended Question? |
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A comparison between two similar things |
Analogy |
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An opinion or description offered by a non-expert who has firsthand experience |
Lay Testimony? |
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Numerical data that summarize facts or samples |
Statistics |
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Speech that is responsible, honest, and tolerant |
Ethical Speech |
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Aristotle's notion of character and credibility |
Ethos |
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The oral presentation of such information about a source as the author, title, and year of publication |
Oral Citation |
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An audience's perception of a speaker as competent, knowledgeable, dynamic, and trustworthy |
Credibility |
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Failing to give credit for compelling phrases taken from another source |
Plagiaphrasing (or Plagiarizing) |
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Language that is thoughtful and intended to not offend |
unbiased language |
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An implied comparison between two things or concepts |
Metaphor |
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Delivering a speech without advance preparation |
Impromptu Speaking |
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A communication theory that suggests that if listeners' expectations about how communication should be expressed are violated, listeners will feel less favorable toward the communicator of the message |
Nonverbal Expectancy Theory |
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The Four Methods of Delivery |
1.Manuscript 2. Memorization 3. Impromptu 4. Extemporaneous |
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Five Functions of a Introduction: |
1. Gain Attention 2. Give Audience a Reason to Listen 3. Introduce Subject 4. Establish Credibility 5. Preview Main Ideas |
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Five Functions of a Introduction. |
Gain Attention 2. Give Audience a Reason to Listen 3. Introduce Subject 4. Establish Credibility 5. Preview Main Ideas |
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A question intended to provoke thought, rather than elicit an answer |
Rhetorical Question |
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Two Functions of a Conclusion |
1. Summarize Speech 2. Provide Closure |
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Quote, Rhetorical Question, and/or Story are All Examples of.... |
Attention Getter |
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When you inspire your audience to go out and do what you've suggested regarding your speech. |
call to action |
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Fact, Policy, & Value |
What are the three persuasive propositions in your book? |
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A statement that is all encompassing without reason/evidence to support. |
Hasty Generalization |
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Reasoning that suggests that because everyone else believes something or is doing something, then it must be valid or correct |
What is Bandwagon Fallacy |
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When your thoughts and what you know to be true are inharmonious. |
cognitive dissonance |
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FINISH |
FIN |