Chs 12-16

Description

Flashcards on Chs 12-16 , created by ermason on 13/11/2014.
ermason
Flashcards by ermason, updated more than 1 year ago
ermason
Created by ermason over 9 years ago
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Resource summary

Question Answer
Purpose Answers the question: Why am I speaking? What outcome do I want?
informative presentation to instruct and describe; report new information, clarify difficult terms, explain scientific phenomena and/or overcome confusion and misunderstanding.
context circumstance and settings in which communication takes place - includes logistics - the strategic planning, arranging, and use of people, facilities, time and materials relevant to your presentation.
competence refers to a speaker's perceived expertise and abilities.
Key Points represent the most important issues or the main ideas you want your audience to understand and remember about your message.
the Speech Framer provides a visual model for organizing presentation content.
mind mapping a method for organizing and recording potential ideas and information by brainstorming alone.
preliminary outline a first-draft outline that puts the major pieces of a presentation in a clear and logical order.
CORE clear, oral, rhetorical and eloquent
metaphor makes a comparison between two unrelated things or ideas
extemporaneous speaking When you use a set of notes or an outline to guide you through a well prepared presentation. The most common form of delivery.
Manuscript speaking when you write your presentation in advance and read it out loud. Used when speech will be published or an occasion is highly emotional.
eye scan glancing at a specific section of your notes or manuscript and then looking up at your audience to speak.
value step a step in an informative presentation that captures audience attention by explaining how the message can enhance their personal well-being and success.
Persuasive Presentation a presentation designed to change audience opinion or behavior.
inoculation building up audience resistance to the "other side" by exposing flaws in the arguments of the opposition and showing how to refute them.
common ground a place where you and your audience do not disagree, in terms of shared interests, belies, values, attitudes or opinions.
argument a claim supported by evidence and reasoning for or against that claim.
claim the conclusion of an argument or the overall position you advocate in a presentation. "What is the argument trying to prove?"
evidence support for a claim "how do you know that?".
warrant explains why evidence is relevant and why it supports the claim. "How did you get there?" "What gives you the right to draw that conclusion?"
backing provides support for the argument's warrant. "Why is this the right way to get there?"
reservation recognizes that a claim may not be true under every circumstance.
qualifier states the degree to which a claim appears to be true. Usually includes the words probably, possibly or likely.
proof the arguments and evidence you use to support and strengthen a persuasive claim.
logos logical proof
pathos emotional proof
ethos personal proof
mythos narrative proof
fallacy an error in thinking that has the potential to mislead or deceive others.
Oral Footnote a spoken citation. It should include enough information to allow an interested listener to find the original sources.
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