COM 114 Test Out-Purdue University

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75 Terms

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Clincher

The final remark that you will make to your audience

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Introduction

Capture the attention of your audience, establish your credibility, relate the material to your audience, announce the topic of the speech, preview the main points of the speech; makes up 10% of the entire speech

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Body

Supporting evidence and research; makes up 85% of the entire speech

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Conclusion

Restate the thesis, restate the main points, end with a clincher; makes up 5% of the entire speech

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Asked Question I Don't Know the Answer to

Be honest-you may ask if someone in the audience knows the answer or you can get back to them once you've located the information (make sure you contact them or else this could effect your credibility)

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How Should I Answer the Questions Asked

Keep the answers concise and direct, listen to the entire question, repeat each question

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Transitions

Words, phrases, or sentences that show the relationship between ideas in your presentation and allow listeners to follow you easily

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Main points

Important topics to the purpose of the speech (usually two to three)

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Subpoints

Build up, support, and explain the main points of the speech

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Sub-subpoints

Build up, support, and explain the subpoints within the speech

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Equal Support

The ideas that support your main points should be held at equal value

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Coordination

The ideas at the same level of importance should use the same series of symbols and have the same indentation

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Enhance Credibility

Experiences, qualifications, or educational background

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Cannot Enhance Credibility

Offending your audience while making your credibility statement

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Ethos

Appeal that is a means of convincing someone of the character or credibility of the persuader; the extent to which the audience trusts you; for example: I am a doctor and therefore you should trust me when I say this is the best treatment for you

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Logos

Appeal that is a way of persuading an audience by reason; inductive and deductive reasoning; for example: It's nonsense to try drugs if you know they are damaging to your health

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Pathos

Appeal that is a way of convincing an audience of an argument by creating an emotional response; for example: You should consider another route home, I heard many gangs come out at night on that street

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Informatory Presentation

Seeks to create awareness of the part of an audience regarding a specific issue

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Explanatory Presentation

Seeks to deepen the audience's understanding; goes beyond making the audience aware of a particular phenomenon and actually create understanding

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Why are Visual Aids Important

Increases clarity and retention, increases effectiveness in both the speaker and the presentation

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Why are Visual Aids Used by a Speaker

The audience's ability to process the information and understand the presented material is greatly enhanced

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Pie Chart

Used when comparing parts of a whole or percentages of the total

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Bar Chart

Used when making comparisons among different types of items to allow for easy visual ranking across items in a category

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Line Chart

Used for comparing charges over time in a set of data to examine trends

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Straw Person

Fallacy when someone ignores or misrepresents a person's actual position and substitutes a weaker, distorted or misrepresented version of that position, thereby making it easier to refute the opponent's position; for example: A biology teachers says all things evolve, a student says humans could not have come from bugs

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Red Herring

Fallacy where an irrelevant topic is inserted into the discussion to divert attention away from the real issue; for example: Mom gets phone bill and you've gone over your limit so you tell her about your math test

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Slippery Slope

Fallacy that asserts that some action will inevitably lead to a chain of events that will end in a certain result; for example: If you allow a student to redo a test, they will want to redo every assignment

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Ad Hominem

Fallacy where irrelevant personal attacks are made against a person or a group to which the person belongs instead of against the argument the person supports; for example: A lawyer attacks the defendant's character instead of what is in question

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False Analogy

Fallacy where one incorrectly assumes that since two things are alike in one or more respects, they are necessarily alike in some other; for example: Children are like dogs so they should eat off the floor and visit the vet

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Directional

Transitional phrases that let your audience know that you are moving away from one idea and on to another; for example: Now that we've established the need for fundraising, let's see which course of action will be most effective

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Signpost

Transitions that mark the exact location in the speech; for example: First, second, lastly

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Internal Preview

Transitions that preview material within the body of the presentation or even within a main point; for example: There are a couple points I would like to make here

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Internal Summary

Transitions that remind the audience of what was just covered; for example: To briefly summarize what I just discussed

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Inoculation Theory

A theory that in refuting an argument, those receiving the supporting argument are better able to resist later arguments challenging the truism

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Vocal Variety

Modifying the volume, rate, pitch, and use of pauses in a presentation

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Eye Contact

Ensures that our presentation remains conversational and that members of the audience feel that we are addressing each of them individually

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Spatial

Pattern that demonstrates the relationship between your material geographically or directionally; for example: Fashion trends around the United States

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Chronological

Pattern that arranges material in an ordered sequence, following a time line; for example: Teach audience how to change a tire

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Problem-Solution

Pattern that demonstrates that there is a problem and then centers on explaining a workable solution to the problem; for example: Persuade audience that spam is a problem with a simple solution

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Topical

Pattern that subdivides a topic into a set of main points (subtopics) that are logical and consistent; for example: Inform the audience of a few of the major contributions of the telephone

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Casual

Pattern that establishes a cause-effect relationship between two variables or events; for example: Life's history on Earth is characterized by a series of major extinctions and the cause of these extinctions are large meteors

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News

Presentation that presents interesting information to an audience on a new topic or provides useful information to an audience

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Persuasive

Presentation that changes, creates, or reinforces an attitude, belief, or behavior in an audience

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Informative

Presentation that enhances the understanding of your audience in relation to some important term, object, event, process, and so forth

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Asynchronous

Presentation that can be accessible at any time (web pages, streaming audio or video, multimedia presentations, Twitter, how-to videos)

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Instructional

Presentation that gives audiences directions on performing a particular task

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Quasi-Scientific

Presentation that helps audience attune to important features of the message and help organize the information so that audiences see relationships in the material

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Impromptu

Delivery method that is characterized by little or no time for advanced preparation

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Manuscript

Delivery method that requires that you write out your speech world for world and deliver the presentation by reading it directly

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Memorized

Delivery method that requires that the text of the presentation is written out word for word, and the speech is then delivered from memory

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Extemporaneous

Delivery method that is a prepared and practice method of delivery

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Adaptors

Nonverbal behaviors that reveal things about our internal state and tend to provide comfort when we are in stressful situations; bad habits that should be avoided because they reveal anxiety; for example: Constantly crossing your arms or moving your feet

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Illustrators

Hand or arm gestures that accompany and enhance the verbal message you are delivering; for example: Saying about this big and giving an estimated measurement with your hands

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Emblems

Gestures that can be directly translated into verbal language; for example: Thumbs-up sign

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Question of Fact

Concerned with what is true or false, what happened or did not happen, or what exists or does not exist; for example: Was John driving too fast to control his car or just so quickly that he upset other drivers?

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Question of Value

Argues that positions are good or bad, ethical or unethical, moral or immoral, right or wrong; for example: Does Thomas deserve the death penalty for killing a man?

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Question of Policy

Targets behaviors, or what we should or should not be doing-as an individual, community, or even a nation; for example: Should assisted suicide be legal?

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To Inform

Purpose that describes, explains, or demonstrates something

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To Persuade

Purpose that influences the attitudes, beliefs, or behaviors of your audience

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To Entertain

Purpose that has the audience, relax, smile, and enjoy the occasion

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Efficacy

The feelings that audience members have in a fear appeal which makes them feel able to perform the recommended responses to the threat that is presented

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Book

Source where you cite the author, his or her credentials, the title, and the date it was published

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Journal/Magazine Article

Source where you include the name and date of the publication and possibly the name of the author

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Newspaper

Source where you include the name and the date of the article

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Interview

Source where you cite the person's name, his or her credentials, and when it took place

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Website

Source where you cite the operator of the site, and the date of any dated material

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News Release

Source where you cite the agency issuing the release and the date it was released

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Elevator Pitch

A concise and well-practiced description of a business venture to a potential investor or a quick summation of what your company makes or does to a possible client

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A Good Visual Aid Includes

One illustrated concept, a maximum of six lines of text (each line limited to six or seven words)

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A Bad Visual Aid Includes

Three or more diagrams, too much text, too many special effects

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Visual Aid Color

Audiences find cool colors such as blue and green more attractive than warm colors such as red, orange, and yellow. DO NOT combine: red/green, brown/green, blue/black, and blue/purple

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Self-Plagiarism

Occurs when an author re-uses previously published material without revealing that it is not new

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Statistics

Evidence consisting of numerical facts that are used to describe a population or event that carry a great deal of power and can be extremely persuasive

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Testimony

Evidence consisting of a quotation or paraphrase from an expert or knowledgeable source used to support an idea or point you are making in a presentation

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Examples

Evidence consisting of stories or narratives that give life to your presentation and personalize your message and your ideas