Tuesday, January 30, 2018
Wrapping Up Speeches - Self-Evaluation
TODAY YOU WILL SELF-EVALUATE YOUR WRITTEN SPEECHES AND YOUR SPEECH PERFORMANCE.
1. Open your speech in Google Docs (obviously the one you shared with me) and, using the checklist, evaluate your written speech. HIGHLIGHT AND IDENTIFY USING THE COMMENT FUNCTION WHERE YOU SUCCEEDED.
2. Take out the SINGLE POINT speech rubric you filled out at the beginning of this unit and, with a different color pen or highlighter, comment on you speech. Where have you improved? What areas must you continue to work on?
PUT YOUR NAME ON BOTH FORMS AND TURN THEM INTO ME WHEN YOU ARE FINISHED. BE REFLECTIVE!
Thursday, January 25, 2018
BRING YOUR PHONES NEXT WEEK
BRING YOUR PHONES NEXT WEEK. WE WILL BE USE THEM TO EASILY MAKE A VIDEO OF YOUR SPEECH SO YOU CAN UPLOAD TO YOUR BLOG.
Speech Writing Check List
Speech Writing Check
List
Use this checklist as you are writing your speech
to see if you are including all the elements of a
successful speech.
ELEMENT
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I HAVE IT
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I NEED TO INCLUDE
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At least one anecdote
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Used the power of 3 (examples or in a series of 3 words or phrases)
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Examples
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Pathos (emotional appeal – seek an empathetic reaction)
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Logos (facts/stats/your research)
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Intro hook
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Dynamic conclusion
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Personal – Use of I, you – pronouns
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Visual image – paint a picture (this can go along with your anecdote)
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Repetition of a power phrase or word or motto
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Allusion
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Sunday, January 21, 2018
Mini-Lesson on ALLUSION
Allusion Definition
- Allusion is a brief and indirect reference to a person, place, thing or idea of historical, cultural, literary or political significance.
- It does not describe in detail the person or thing to which it refers. It is just a passing comment and the writer expects the reader to possess enough knowledge to spot the allusion and grasp its importance in a text.
- For instance, you make a literary allusion the moment you say, “I do not approve of this quixotic idea,” Quixotic means stupid and impractical derived from Cervantes’s “Don Quixote”, a story of a foolish knight and his misadventures. (Literarydevices.net)
Wednesday, January 17, 2018
Impromptu Speeches
1) Choose from two prompts - 10 seconds
2) When I say go, you have 90 seconds to outline your speech
3) Your goal is to speak 1 minute, 30 seconds
HINTS:
P.R.E.P. (Point. Reason. Example. Point)
Share the primary reason (or reasons, if you have more time).
Share an example (preferably in story form) where your main point or reason is supported.
Finally, conclude by summarizing your central point again.
Issue, Pros vs. Cons, Conclusion
Start off by framing the issue.
Talk about the benefits (use an anecdote - a personal story)
Talk about the drawbacks. (again, anecdote or example)
Conclude with your recommendation.
5W – In this pattern, you cover your topic by addressing the Who, What, When, Where, and Why elements. This is also issue oriented -
[1] Who is involved
[2] what the goals are;
[3] when it started, and the schedule for the future;
[4] where does it take place; and
[5] why are you involved.
Use personal stories. Stories are emotional, real, and interesting. If you stick to personal stories, you’ll find that it is much easier to speak (even without preparation) because the events happened to you.
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
Sunday, January 14, 2018
8 WRITING LESSONS
8 WRITING LESSON = A GREAT SPEECH - POYNER
Click here to go directly to the URL - 8 Writing Lessons from Michelle Obama . . .
8 writing lessons from Michelle Obama’s DNC speech
Great oratory magnifies the lessons of great writing. Written for the ear, memorable speeches tend to use certain rhetorical devices — such as parallelism or emphatic word order — in greater measure than less dramatic forms of communication. The language strategies rise to the surface, so you may not even need a pair of X-ray reading glasses to see them.
Last night I listened to Michelle Obama’s speech at the Democratic National Convention. It has been widely praised, even by Hillary Clinton's archrival, Donald Trump. Some commentators ranked it among the best such convention speeches in decades.
What is it about the First Lady’s words that worked for so many? If we can answer that question, we can store those writing strategies in our toolbox.
I am relying on a transcript of the speech published by Vox. Here it is if you prefer to read the whole thing first. If you prefer, follow my lead through some of the most significant parts of Michelle Obama’s speech, beginning with its first paragraph:
"It is hard to believe that it has been eight years since I first came to this convention to talk with you about why I thought my husband should be president. Remember how I told you about his character and his conviction? His decency and grace? The traits we have seen every day as he served our country in the White House."
Lesson one: Liberate your pronouns. Use first person, second person and third person to create specific effects. Look at all the pronouns in that paragraph — and throughout the speech — each one doing its job. "I" or "me" or "my" makes a personal appeal. "We" or "us" proclaims collective power. "You" makes prose sound conversational. The third person points the camera away from the speaker.
"I also told you about our daughters, how they are the heart of our hearts, the center of our world, and during our time in the White House we have had the joy of watching them grow from bubbly little girls into poised young women."
Lesson two: Unlock your diction — your word hoard — to choose language most appropriate to your topic and mission. Michelle Obama’s words seem chosen as an antidote to what some have described as Donald Trump’s dystopian vision of America and the world. When he speaks, bats flap their wings in caves. When she speaks, little birds chirp and alight on her shoulders. Every key word here has a positive connotation: daughters, hearts, center, world, joy, grow, bubbly little girls, poised young women.
"I will never forget that winter morning as I watched our girls, just 7 and 10 years old, pile into those black SUVs with all those men with guns."
Lesson three: Find a visual image to help you tell the story. This anecdotal image moves the speech closer to narrative and imprints itself on the memory of the audience. The juxtaposition of elements — little girls with noses pressed against the glass in a scary car filled with men with guns — creates a tension that can be vicariously experienced.
"How we urged them to ignore those who question their father’s citizenship or faith. How we insist that the hateful language they hear from public figures on TV does not represent the true spirit of this country. How we explain that when someone is cruel or acts like a bully, you don’t stoop to their level."
Lesson four: Unleash the power of three. Notice how often the speaker relies upon a pattern of three to make her point. This is one of the oldest tricks in the orator’s book. In literature, three is always the largest number. "Of the people, by the people, for the people." Four examples or 40 become an inventory. Three encompasses the world, creating the illusion we know everything we need to know.
"Our motto is, when they go low, we go high."
Lesson five: Express your best thought in a short sentence. This is one of the best lines in the speech for a number of reasons. It’s a short sentence, only seven words. Each word is a single syllable. There is parallelism between "they go low" and "we go high," emphasized by the repetition of the word "go." The sentence is complex, that is, it begins with a subordinate clause "When they go low," which describes the opponent’s weak move, followed by a main clause that gives greater weight to the speaker’s values.
"Kids like the little black boy who looked up at my husband, his eyes wide with hope, and he wondered, Is my hair like yours?"
Lesson six: Find a focus. Stick with it. In the story "The Lottery," by Shirley Jackson, the winner of the town’s annual lottery gets stoned to death. It is a surprise ending, but there are several mentions of the word ‘stones’ as foreshadowing — never "rocks."
If I had to choose one word to describe the speech, it would be "kids." It is repeated five times on a single page. She also uses words like children, sons and daughters, but the informality of kids draws you in: "So, how are the kids?" There is a significant literature in African-American culture about the issue, the problem, the glory of hair. Of "good" hair, and "bad" hair. It feels almost daring for Michelle Obama to refer to this incident, to turn a taboo into a parable and a blessing.
"Somebody who knows this job and takes it seriously. Somebody who understands that the issues of our nation are not black or white. It cannot be boiled down to 140 characters. Because when you have the nuclear codes at your fingertips and the military in your command, you can’t make snap decisions."
Lesson seven: Let the shark swim under the surface. Remember "Jaws?" Remember how long it took for you to see the shark jump out of the water? Until then, you only heard creepy music and saw the consequences of humans being attacked.
In the "Harry Potter" series, we don’t often get a direct look at the Dark Lord, the evil Voldemort. Wizards fear to speak his name. The weird-coiffed Donald Trump looks nothing like the reptilian Voldemort, but there is a bit of "He Who Shall Not Be Named" in this critique, as if even uttering his name would pollute the language and meaning of her oration.
"This is the story of this country. The story that has brought me to the stage tonight. The story of generations of people who felt the lash of bondage, the shame of servitude, the sting of segregation, who kept on striving, and hoping, and doing what needed to be done. So that today, I wake up every morning in a house that was built by slaves. And I watch my daughters — two beautiful intelligent black young women — play with the dog on the White House lawn."
Lesson eight: Place the emphatic words at the end. This, for me, was the dramatic climax of the speech, a moment of catharsis. It brought a tear to my eye, when I first heard the speech, and again the next morning when I watched highlights.
I feel the mojo in this paragraph. The alliteration. The triple use of three examples: story, story, story; lash, shame, sting; striving, hoping, doing. Two powerful sentences follow, one which ends with a great passive construction, "a house that was built by slaves"; the next placing the wonderfully familiar (girls playing with dogs) up against the symbolically majestic (the White House lawn).
Thursday, January 11, 2018
Speech Organizer
Speech Outline/Organizer
Remember to make a copy and label it: Name, Block, Speech
Remember, this is an outline of your speech. I do not expect to see full sentences of every word you plan to say. Bullet points are fine. If you feel you need to write it out completely in order to memorized, do that on a separate piece of paper.
INTRODUCTION (30ish seconds)
Hook:
Background/History if needed:
Thesis: (What’s the message)
Preview main points you aim to make:
Transition to Main point #1
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II BODY (3 points – 1ish minute each for a total of 3ish minutes)
Point # 1
Topic sentence (remember that your transition sentence and your topic sentence must share similar language or ideas)
Detail/Evidence/Examples (3 is always a good number)
1)
2)
3)
Transition to point # 2
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Point # 2
Topic sentence (remember that your transition sentence and your topic sentence must share similar language or ideas)
Detail/Evidence/Examples (3 is always a good number)
1)
2)
3)
Transition to point # 3
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Point # 3
Topic sentence (remember that your transition sentence and your topic sentence must share similar language or ideas)
Detail/Evidence/Examples (3 is always a good number)
1)
2)
3)
Transition to conclusion:
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CONCLUSION (30ish)
Transition/review major points (no details)
Restate thesis with different language:
Connect to the hook/relate to reader:
Concluding sentence (end with a bang – a strong statement, relatable quote, etc)
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Tuesday, January 9, 2018
Speaking with Purpose Timetable
TIMETABLE
Week of Jan 8-12
1. introduction
2. watch and evaluate speeches
3. choose topic
Week of Jan 15-19
1. watch and evaluate speeches
2. begin writing speeches
3. impromptu practice
Week of Jan 22-26
1. Rewrite and practice speeches
Week of Jan 29-Feb 1
1. Deliver speeches
Sunday, January 7, 2018
SINGLE-POINT RUBRIC SPEECH MAKING
Name___________________Block_____Subject
of Speech_________________
Single Point
Rubric
Speech
Making
CONCERNS
Areas That Need Attention
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CRITERIA
Standards for Mastery Level for this Performance
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ADVANCED
Evidence of insightful/exceptional/going beyond what
is expected
performance
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Criteria #1
Verbal
presentation
·
is dynamic/colourful,
·
loud and clear,
·
well-paced,
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Criteria #2
Platform
appearance
·
is natural/relax,
·
notes are seldomly relied
upon,
·
posture is balanced w/o
podium dancing,
·
expression is
friendly/dynamic, gestures are effective,
·
and eye contact is relaxed,
yet personal
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Criteria #3
Content of
speech
·
is relevant to the audience
and/or assignment,
·
has an effective hook that
grabs the audience’s attention,
·
has a clear and concise
thesis,
·
all supporting points are
organized/logical,
·
shows knowledge/
understanding of the subject
·
if applicable, visuals
enhance the
topic and the layout is clear, grammatically correct and easy to see/read
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SPEAKING WITH PURPOSE
"Surveys about our fears commonly show fear of public speaking at the top of the list. Our fear of standing up in front of a group and talking is so great that we fear it more than death, in surveys at least." (November 2012 Psychology Today - "The Thing We Fear Most" by Glenn Costron, PhD)
Why are public speaking skills important?
Without communication skills, the ability to progress in the working world and in life, itself, would be nearly impossible. Public speaking is one of the most important and most dreaded forms of communication. Glossophobia or speech anxiety, is the most common fear people have across the globe.
Our Goal: The goal of this unit is to turn you into a powerful, self-confident speaker. Your goal is to take command of your voices, expressions, and tone - all the tools needed to deliver content with passion and enthusiasm - guaranteed to engage your audience.
Examples of Speeches
Examples of Speeches
Michelle Obama at the DNC 2016
Michelle Obama's Speech in New Hampshire
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