280 likes | 578 Vues
1. Intro to Public Speaking. JEOPARDY. Review Chapters 1-4 & 14. Ch 15 Speaking to Inform. Ch 1 Speaking in Public. Ch 2 Ethics. Ch 3 Listening. Ch 5 Topics & Purposes. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200.
E N D
1 Intro to Public Speaking JEOPARDY Review Chapters 1-4 & 14
Ch15 Speaking to Inform Ch 1Speaking inPublic Ch 2Ethics Ch 3Listening Ch5Topics & Purposes 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500 500
Speaking to Inform100 A speech designed to convey knowledge and understanding—not to advocate a cause. A: What is an informative speech?
Speaking to Inform200 To present one’s own ideas in human terms that relate in some way to the experience of the audience. A: What does it mean to personalize?
Speaking to Inform 300 A statement of the similarities among two or more people, events, ideas, etc. A: What is comparison?
Speaking to Inform 400 Speeches about numerology, string theory, and existentialism are examples of this type of speech. A: What is a speech about concepts?
Speaking to Inform 500 Description, comparison, and contrast are ways to meet this speaking guideline. A: What is avoid abstraction?
Speaking in Public (ch 1) 100 Anxiety over the prospect of giving a speech in front of an audience. A: What is stage fright?
Speaking in Public (ch 1) 200 The sum of a person’s knowledge, experience, goals, value, and attitudes. Daily Double A: What is frame of reference?
Speaking in Public (ch 1) 300 The belief that one’s own group or culture is superior to all other groups or cultures. A: What is ethnocentrism?
Speaking in Public (ch 1) 400 Anything that impedes the message. A: What is interference?
Speaking in Public (ch 1) 500 A message sent from a listener to a speaker. A: What is feedback?
Ethics & Public Speaking (ch 2)100 The branch of philosophy that deals with issues of right and wrong in human affairs. A: What is anethics?
Ethics & Public Speaking (ch 2) 200 Failing to give credit for specific quotations and paraphrases that are borrowed from other people. A: What is anincremental plagiarism?
Ethics & Public Speaking (ch 2) 300 When a speaker takes ideas from two or three sources and passes it off as their own. A: What ispatchwork plagiarism?
Ethics & Public Speaking (ch 2) 400 When a speaker summarizes somebody else’s work in their own words. A: What is paraphrasing?
Ethics & Public Speaking (ch 2) 500 • Stealing your speech entirely from another source and passing it off as your own. A: What isglobal plagiarism?
Listening (ch 3)100 Listening for pleasure or enjoyment. A: What is appreciative listening?
Listening (ch 3)200 To evaluate a message for purposes of accepting or rejecting it. A: What is acritical listening?
Listening (ch 3)300 Giving undivided attention to a speaker in a genuine effort to understand the speaker’s point of view. A: What is active listening?
Listening (ch 3)400 Listening to provide emotional support. A: What is empathic listening?
Listening (ch 3)500 Prematurely rejecting speaker’s ideas as boring or misguided. A: What is jumping to conclusions?
Topics & Purposes (ch 5)100 When you act as a teacher, this is your general purpose. A: What is to inform?
Topics & Purposes (ch 5) 200 A one-sentence statement that sums up or encapsulates the main points (content) of a speech. A: What isthe central idea?
Topics & Purposes (ch 5) 300 What a speaker wants the audience to remember after it has forgotten everything else in a speech. A: What isthe residual message?
Topics & Purposes (ch 5) 400 A single infinitive phrase that states precisely what a speaker hopes to accomplish in her or his speech. A: What isa specific purpose statement?
Topics & Purposes (ch 5) 500 • A method of generating ideas for speech topics by free association of words and ideas. A: What isbrainstorming?