SP10.5 2.2f

From Brush Schools Wiki

Jump to: navigation, search

Go back to main Writing page

Contents

Writing Standard 2.2f - Speech

Organize writing so that it has an engaging introduction, logical and effective development of ideas, and a satisfying conclusion. ES

Standard in Kid Friendly Language

The speech should:

capture the attention of the audience

let the audience know the topic of the speech

let the audience know the main points of the speech

provide specific and relevant supporting ideas for the main points

provide clear transitions from one point to the next

have a conclusion that restates or summarizes the main idea while letting the audience know that the speech is ending.

Standard Unwrapped

KNOW


Vocabulary: introduction, logical, effective, supporting details, body, transitions, conclusion, summary, restatement

ABLE TO DO

Prepare an introduction which contains any necessary background information, an engaging attention getter, a link, a thesis statement, and a preview statement.

Prepare a body which discusses all main points, provides specific supporting details or evidence, provides a variety of details or evidence, uses appropriate transitions to move from one idea to the next, and contains no irrelevant information.

Prepare a conclusion which restates the main idea or summarizes the main idea or proposes a solution and lets the audience know the speech is coming to a close.'

Instructional Strategies

Chapter 9 from Speech: Communication Matters read and discuss;

Assessment Strategies

Getting Started in Public Speaking by James Payne and Diana Prentice

True/False Quick Quizzes for each section of Chapter 9

Test over chapter 9


Resources

Speech: Communication Matters, 2nd edition by McCutcheon, Schaffer, and Wycoff with accompanying videos, worksheets, activities, and tests.

The Complete Book of Speech Communication by Carol Marrs


Projects and Activities

The following exercises from the workbook accompanying the text: New Speech Terms; Things to Remember; Important concepts; Writing Attention-Getters; The Complete Introduction; Organizing an Outline; Organizational Patterns; Choosing an Organizational Pattern; Adding Details to Your Speech; The Conclusion; Evaluation for Speech Organization; Thesis Statement and Preview; Sample Speech Outline

Personal tools