1 / 20

Informative Speaking

Informative Speaking. The art of presenting information without an opinion. Introduction & Overview. Informative vs. Persuasive Speeches Types of informative speaking Techniques of informative speaking Organization and Structure. Informative speech. What it is:

leo-shannon
Download Presentation

Informative Speaking

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Informative Speaking The art of presenting information without an opinion.

  2. Introduction & Overview • Informative vs. Persuasive Speeches • Types of informative speaking • Techniques of informative speaking • Organization and Structure

  3. Informative speech • What it is: • Summary of information • Reliable sources • What it is not: • Book report • Summary of one source • Your opinion • Attempt to persuade

  4. Informative vs. Persuasive Speeches • Informative speeches are non-controversial • Informative speaker does not intend to change audience attitudes

  5. Types of Informative Speaking • By content • By purpose • Objects • Procedures • People • Events • Ideas

  6. Informative Speeches by Content • Your speech can inform based on: • Objects • Processes • Events • Concepts • Intangible ideas, beliefs, theories or principles

  7. Informative Speeches by Purpose • Your speech can inform based on: • Descriptions • Explanations • Instructions

  8. Informative speech about objects • Simple, straightforward speech • Example: cello, digital cameras, stamp collection • Time limit determines the amount of detail one can share

  9. Informative speech about people • Biographical • No need to tell everything about a person; Relate information to a specific purpose

  10. More Informative Speech Topics • Presentations about Events • Presentations about Ideas • Example: time management, evolution, freedom of speech

  11. Techniques of Informative Speaking • Informative Purpose Statement • Precedes a thesis statement • In one sentence asks: • What is your speech going to do? • What will the audience walk away with?

  12. Techniques of Informative Speaking, cont. • Create information hunger • Give the audience a reason to listen to and learn from your speech

  13. Techniques of Informative Speaking, cont. • Make it easy to listen • Watch for information overload • Choose 3 to 5 main ideas • Use information and examples that connect to the audience • Use simple information and build up to complex ideas

  14. Techniques of Informative Speaking, cont. • Emphasize important points • Repetition • Rewording of important points • Signposts • Words or phrases that emphasize the importance of what you are about to say

  15. Techniques of Informative Speaking, cont. • Make the message clear • Be aware of what you intend to communicate • Would this message sound clear to you if you heard if for the first time?

  16. Techniques of Informative Speaking, cont. • Make the presentation interesting • Relate to your listeners interests • Create interesting presentation aids • Use humor • Use humor to make a point • Make yourself the butt of the joke • Use humorous quotations

  17. Organization & Structure • Introduction (tell what you’re going to say) • Establish audience interest and attention • Preview thesis/purpose statement • Preview main points

  18. Organization & Structure • The Body (say it) • Limit division of main points to 3 to 5 subpoints • Use good transitions • Order points in a way that is easy to understand and remember

  19. Organization & Structure • The conclusion (tell what you’ve said) • Review main points • Remind audience why the subject is important to them • Provide the audience with a memory aid

  20. Scoring Rubric I will use the following Rubric to grade you speeches. • Introduction (20pts): Attention Getter? Thesis? Overview of main idea? • Body (20pts): Organized? Descriptive Details? • Conclusion(20pts): Reviewed main idea? Final thought? • Vocal Delivery(20pts): Volume Quality Speed pitch Articulation pronunciation • Physical Delivery(20pts): posture gestures movements eye contact facial expression personal appearance TOTAL POINTS _______________ (OUT OF 100)

More Related