180 likes | 313 Views
Eloquentia Perfecta. Fall 2013. Focusing elements. Focusing elements for the speaker (me, me, me) General purpose Thesis statement. The general purpose To inform To persuade To mark an occasion (celebrate, entertain, inspire, etc.). The thesis statement.
E N D
Eloquentia Perfecta Fall 2013
Focusing elements • Focusing elements for the speaker (me, me, me) • General purpose • Thesis statement
The general purpose • To inform • To persuade • To mark an occasion (celebrate, entertain, inspire, etc.)
The thesis statement • Clearly expresses the central idea of your speech. • i.e., What is the speech about? • An expository (explanatory) statement explains something to the audience. • An argumentativestatement makes a claim about a topic and justifies this claim with specific evidence. • Theclaim could be an opinion, a policy proposal, an evaluation, a cause-and-effect statement, or an interpretation. The goal is to convince the audience that the claim is true based on the evidence provided.
Good reading on thesis statements • http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/588/01/
Focusing tool • Outlining • Identifying claims and supporting material • Choosing a pattern of organization
When outlining, consider • The Principles of Good Form: • Unity- this is exhibited when the presentation contains only those points that are implied by the purpose and the thesis statement. • Coherence- the clarity and logical consistency • Coordination • Subordination • Balance- appropriate emphasis or weight on each part of the speech relative to the other parts and to the theme.
Transitions • Words, phrases or sentences that tie the speech ideas together and enable the speaker to move smoothly from one point to the next. • Examples: • To show comparison: similarly, in the same way, likewise, just as • To contrast ideas: on the other hand, and yet, at the same time • To illustrate sequence of time or events • First, second, etc. before, after, later, earlier • To indicate explanation: for example, to illustrate, in other words • To emphasize significance: most important, above all, remember • To summarize: as we have seen, altogether, in summary, finally
Reading on transitions • http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/574/01/
Transition Checklist • Did you include enough transitions to adequately guide your listeners through your speech? • Do you use appropriate transitions when making comparisons, showing cause and effect, illustrating a sequence in time, contrasting ideas, summarizing information, and so forth? • Do you include full-sentence transitions that alert listeners to shifts from one main point to the next? • Do you use transitions to alert listeners to the conclusion of your speech?
Patterns of organization • Chronologically • Organize the points according to their occurrence in time relative to one another • A historic event • Spatial pattern • Use when your purpose is to describe or explain the physical arrangements of a place, scene or an object • The tour of a facility
Causal (Cause-Effect) pattern • When you need to relate a cause to its effects • Why students drop out • Problem-Solution Pattern • Organizes main points both to demonstrate the nature and significance of a problem and to provide justification for a proposed solution • Teen pregnancy
Narrative pattern • Storytelling; a story or a series of short stories • My grandmother . . . • Circular pattern • Develops one idea, which leads to the next, which leads to the next . . . • Good for demonstrating a particular form of reasoning
Reading on patterns • http://www.publicspeakingguidebook.com/the_abcs_of_public_speaking_p10.htm
Focusing elements for the audience • Thesis statement • Preview statement • Transitions/signposts
Focusing tools • Language • Voice • Body movement • Presentation aids
Discussion: how do I use my research to develop my outline? • FAQ • How many main points should I use? • Rough draft outlines are due Monday, September 30. • Yes, it has to be properly formatted and typed!
Source • Mikesell, R. (2013). Focusing Elements. • O’Hair, D., Stewart, R. and Rubenstein, H. (2010). A speaker’s Guidebook, Text and Reference. New York: Bedford/St. Martin’s.