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Chapter 4. Speaking to Inform

Chapter 4. Speaking to Inform. About Informative Speech. Any speech is an informative speech if it presents information to an audience. When do we make informative speech? All the time . What is the goal of giving an informative speech?

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Chapter 4. Speaking to Inform

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  1. Chapter 4.Speaking to Inform

  2. About Informative Speech • Any speech is an informative speech if it presents information to an audience. • When do we make informative speech? • All the time. • What is the goal of giving an informative speech? • To state ideas simply, clearly, and interestingly.

  3. Preparing for the Informative Speech • Blueprint: a vision of what you want to build. • Analyzing your audience • Choosing your topic • Narrowing your topic • Gathering information • Preparing visual aids • Organizing your speech

  4. Step 1: Analyzing your audience • Demographic: the population’s needs, interests, knowledge. • Age range • Gender • Occupation(s) • Economic level(s) • General background • P.63-64: Personal Information Survey. • P.65: Analysis of Audience

  5. Step 2: Choosing your topic • Choose sth that you know a lot about or sth that really interests you. • An experience that you remember vividly and are enthusiastic about. • Sth you care a lot about. • Sth at which you are skilled or experienced. • Sth about which you are knowledgeable.

  6. Step 3: Narrowing your topic • Not to tell everything you know about the topic. • It’s impossible to say everything in a short amount of time. • Your audience can’t remember too many details after a speech. • How to narrow an informative speech topic effectively? • A good informative speech topicis specific, contains only one idea, and is achievable. • P.68. Evaluate topics.

  7. Step 4: Gathering information • Two ways to look for material for your speech: • Within yourself • Outside yourself • Interview • Library and Internet research • Find more information than you can use! • Choose what to include instead of stretching the facts to fill time. • Extra knowledge may be helpful for Q&A session.

  8. Interview • Open-ended questions • Closed-ended questions • Scale questions • Directive questions • Multiple-choice questions • Library search • Bibliography note cards

  9. Step 5: Preparing visual aids • Why use visual aids? • Help make a speech clear and interesting. • Add variety, capture attention, illustrate concepts, and provide entertainment. • Visual aids are helpful in three ways: • They help the speaker get organized. • They help the audience understand the information. • They help the audience remember the speech.

  10. Chalkboard • Poster • With charts or graphs • With words or phrases • With drawings • Objects or models • Audiovisual equipment (overhead projector or opaque projector) • Slides • Films • videotapes • Handouts

  11. Tips of using visual aids: • Use visual aids that are large enough for everyone to see. • Do not pass out objects or papers during your speech. • Keep charts, maps, and graphs very simple. • Look at your audience, not at your visual aids. • Put your visual aids away after you have finished using them. • Practice using your visual aids with your speech before you actually deliver it.

  12. Informative Speech

  13. Schedule • 4/2-4/8: Find a topic for your informative speech. Prepare your proposal. • 4/9 & 4/16: Present your proposal in class. You topic needs to be approved by the whole class; otherwise you need to change topics. • 4/16-4/22: Preparation. • 4/23: Informative speech presentation.

  14. Topic • Main goal: sth related to culture. • Three standpoints to take: • Sth globalwide  Universality • Sth which others have but we don’t  Specificity • Sth we both have but different  Comparison

  15. Proposal for Informative Speech • Central topic: Culture • To give your own definition of “culture.” • Personal topic (A rough direction is fine. No need to give a specific “title” at this stage.) • To explain the reasons why the topic you choose fits your definition of “culture.” • Rationale • To briefly introduce the topic, and tell the possible directions you are going to probe into the topic. • To explain the importance of knowing this topic.

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