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Insights On Public Speaking Group 3

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
199 views27 pages

Insights On Public Speaking Group 3

Uploaded by

Cleofe Pavo
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Insights on Public

Speaking
Group 3
According to Stephen Lucas (2011),
author of The Art of Public Speaking,
a good delivery means that you are
capable and able to present your
message in a clear, coherent, and
interesting way.
Furthermore, he also said.

Good delivery…conveys the speaker’s ideas clearly,


interestingly, and without distracting the audience.
Most audiences prefer delivery that combines a
certain degree of formality with the best attributes of
good conversation—directness, spontaneity,
animation, vocal and facial expressiveness, and a
lively sense of communication.
It requires making connections with your
audience and presenting yourself formally
to the public. As a student of public
speaking, you should know that public
speaking is not simply reading your speech
or talking about your topic.
Types of Speech According to
Purpose

Group 3
1. An informative speech
It provides the audience with a clear
understanding of a concept or idea. Such as:
• Lectures
• Reporting
• Seminar
• Demonstrations
2. An entertainment speech
It amuses the audience.
Examples are:
•Comedians
•Performers
3. A persuasive speech seeks

to provide the audience with favorable or


acceptable ideas that can influence their
own ideas and decisions.
Best examples are:
Best Examples are:

• Campaign speeches of the running candidates for


government post
• Advertisements
• Debates
Types of speech
according to Delivery

Group 3
Extemporaneous
• Speaking with limited
preparation

• Guided by notes or outline

Description • Delivered conversationally

• Most popular type


• When you are a candidate for a post in
a student government and you deliver
your campaign speech before a voting
Speaking public.
Situations
• When you are assigned to report a
topic in class
• May not have adequate time to
Disadvantages plan, organize, and rehearse.
• Create an outline.
• Organize your points logically
(most important to least important
or vice versa).
Tips • Use facts and real-life experiences
as your examples.
• Manage your time well.
• Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse
Impromptu
Description
• Speaking without advanced preparation.
• Unrehearsed speech.
• Spoken conversationally

Speaking
Situations • In an event where you are asked to say a
few words.
• First day at work or in class, or during an
interview
Advantages
• Spontaneous or natural speaking.
• More focused and brief.

Disadvantages
• Tendency to be disorganized.
• Lacks connection with the audience.
• Nerve-racking for inexperienced
speakers and beginners
• Once you are requested to say
something, pause for a
moment to plan in your head
what to say.
Tips • State your main point briefly
and deliver it at a pace your
audience can follow.
• End by saying thank you.
Manuscript
• Speaking with advanced preparation.
Description • Planned and rehearsed speech.
• Reading aloud a written message

• Newscasting with a TelePrompTer or an


autocue device.
Speaking • Presenting the legal proceedings and
Situations verdict in court.
• Reading the rules and criteria in a contest
• Exact repetition of the written words.
Advantages
• Guided speech

• Boring and uninteresting presentation.


Disadvantages
• Lacks audience rapport or connection
• Rehearse the speech over
and over again until you
sound natural.
Tips • Observe accomplished news
anchors and note how
conversational they sound
when they deliver the news.
Memorized
• Speaking with advanced preparation
Description • Planned and rehearsed speech
• Reciting a written message word-for-
word from memory

• When you perform in a stage play


• When you deliver a declamation,
Speaking
oratorical, or literary piece
Situations
• When an actor or actress in a scene
performs a script from memory
• Exact repetition of the written words
Advantages from memory.
• Free to move around the stage

• Speakers might end up speaking in a


monotone pattern. Alternatively, he/she
might take a fast pace.
Disadvantages
• When the speaker cannot control his/her
stage fright, he/she might have difficulty
remembering his/her memorized speech.
• Rehearse the speech over and
over again until you sound
natural and feel confident.
Tips • Observe how actors/actresses
perform their script in a theater,
television, or movie scenes.

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