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PubSpeak 16-1 Speaking to Persuade

Published on Mar 16, 2016

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

public speaking

16-1  Speaking to Persuade

PERSUASION
The process of creating, reinforcing, or changing people's belief's or actions

the challenge

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MENTAL DIALOGUE WITH AUDIENCE
The mental give-and-take between speaker and listener during a persuasive speech

TARGET AUDIENCE

TARGET AUDIENCE
The portion of the whole audience that the speaker most wants to persuade

persuasive speech types

questions of fact

Types of Persusive Speeches

QUESTION OF FACT
A question about the truth or
falsity of an assertion

questions of VALUE

Types of Persusive Speeches

QUESTION OF VALUE
A question about the worth, rightness, morality, and so forth
of an idea or action

questions of POLICY

Types of Persusive Speeches

QUESTION OF POLICY
A question about whether a specific course of action should or
should not be taken

speech to gain passive agreement

PASSIVE AGREEMENT
A persuasive speech in which the speaker's goal is to convince the audience that a given policy is desirable without encouraging the audience to take action in support of the policy

speech to gain immediate action

IMMEDIATE ACTION
A persuasive speech in which the speaker's goal is to convince the audience to take action in support of a given policy

analyzing questions of policy

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NEED
Is there a serious problem or
need that requires a change
from current policy?

BURDEN OF PROOF
The obligation facing a persuasive speaker to prove that a change from current policy is necessary

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PLAN
If there is a problem with current policy, does the speaker have a plan to solve the problem

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PRACTICALITY
Will the speaker's plan solve the problem?
Will it create new and more serious problems?

organizing speeches on questions of policy

  • Problem-Solution Order
  • Problem-Cause-Solution Order
  • Comparative Advantages Order
  • Monroe's Motivated Sequence

PROBLEM-SOLUTION ORDER
A method of organizing persuasive speeches in which the first main point deals with the existence of a problem and the second main point presents a solution to the problem

PROBLEM-CAUSE-SOLUTION ORDER
A method of organizing persuasive speeches in which the first main point identifies a problem, the second main point analyzes the causes of the problem, and the third main point presents a solution to the problem

COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES ORDER
A method of organizing persuasive speeches in which each main point explains why a speaker's solution to a problem is preferable to other proposed solutions

MONROE'S MOTIVATED SEQUENCE
A method of organizing
persuasive speeches that seek immediate action.

MONROE'S MOTIVATED SEQUENCE

  • Attention
  • Need
  • Satisfaction
  • Visualization
  • Action

organizing speeches on questions of policy

  • Problem-Solution Order
  • Problem-Cause-Solution Order
  • Comparative Advantages Order
  • Monroe's Motivated Sequence