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32 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
6 keys to confidence
1. Act confidently 2. practice confidence 3. care about your subject 4. know your subject 5. see your classmates as friends 6. see yourself as successful
5 canons of rhetoric
MIDDS 1. Memory 2. Invention 3. Disposition 4. Delivery 5. Style
Invention
finding information for your presentation
Disposition
selecting an appropriate arrangement and structure for a presentation
Style
Using clear and ornamental language
Memory
being able to recall main ideas and details in your presentation
Delivery
using effective verbal and nonverbal behavior to maximize effectiveness of message
Modes of Devilery
1. Extemporaneous 2. Memorized 3. Manuscript 4. Impromptu
Example of Extemporaneous
jotting an answer in class then reading answer to teacher
example of memorized
giving a speech without any notecards or powerpoint
example of manuscript mode
writing out a whole toast and reading it for a speech
example of impromptu
reading fortune cookie then speaking about it
4 skills of informative presenter
1. define 2. describe 3. demonstrate 4. explain
example of defining
defining the word placebo
example of describing
describing your hometown
example of demonstrating
demonstrating how to brush your teeth
example of explaining
explaining what happened at the Gettysburg address
4 organizational patterns of informative presentations
1. time-sequence 2. spatial pattern 3. topical pattern 4. cause-effect pattern
time-sequence pattern
describes order of events or steps
spatial pattern
describing where places are according to each other
topical pattern
breaks down large topic into small topic
cause-effect pattern
describes why something occurs
Fallacies
1. name calling 2. glittering generality 3. bandwagon technique 4. circular reasoning 5. either/or 6. post hoc
name calling
putting labels on others to try and make your point stronger
glittering generality
giving an idea that has positive virtue without describing it. we should have democracy...
bandwagon technique
doing something because everyone else is doing it
circular reasoning
uses two unproven propositions to prove each other. pit bulls are dangerous and should be outlawed. we know they are dangerous because they should be outlawed
either/or
assuming that everything has an opposite position. either you are for me or against me
post hoc fallacy
thinking the current event is caused by a previous event that really has nothing to do with the current event
communication
process of transferring information from one entity to another
persuasive speech introduction
I. Attention getter II. Audience relevance link III. credibility IV. proposition V. Preview
persuasive speech conclusion
I. Review main points II. Restate Thesis III. Decisive closing