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Speaking to Persuade

Speaking to Persuade. Part II. 6 steps for persuasive speech prep. Choosing your topic Criteria? Determining your specific purpose Purposes? Analyzing your audience Gathering information Preparing visual aids Organizing your speech. Interesting. Not too large a change. Controversial.

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Speaking to Persuade

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  1. Speaking to Persuade Part II

  2. 6 steps for persuasive speech prep. • Choosing your topic • Criteria? • Determining your specific purpose • Purposes? • Analyzing your audience • Gathering information • Preparing visual aids • Organizing your speech Interesting. Not too large a change. Controversial Belief. Opinion. Behavior

  3. Preparing visual aids How will you present the information?

  4. Readers can get the same data from various visually-oriented representations, but they will experience different rhetorical effects. • Table • Figure

  5. Table • Use it when your readers are likely to want very precise numbers, and you don’t want to impose on your data a visual image implying the point you want them to support.

  6. Figure • It is useful when your readers are less interested in precise details than in a general point, and you want to reinforce your point with a strong image. • Line graph • Bar chart • Stacked bar chart • Horizontal bar chart • Centrally divided horizontal bar chart • Pie chart

  7. Line graph • It gives less exact information but offers a more striking image of a story. It helps readers see trends easily.

  8. Bar chart • It visually communicate the gist of its point quickly. • It also helps readers to make individual comparisons.

  9. Stacked bar chart • It divides the bar into its relative proportions of 100 percent of some other variable.

  10. Horizontal bar chart

  11. Centrally divided horizontal bar chart

  12. Pie chart

  13. DON’T!!

  14. DON’T!!

  15. Organizing your speech • Opener building on areas of agreement • Statement of purpose • Preview of persuasive points. • Body • Summary • Memorable concluding remarks • (p.132)

  16. Decide Debate Topics • Read all topics listed on the Wikis. Everyone votes for the most promising 4 topics. • Divide into 8 groups (listed on the next page). • Each group will be randomly assigned to one side (pros or cons) of a topic. • Brainstorming ideas. Go back home and do some research. • Bring your data to class next week.

  17. Group list

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