All About Speech Analysis 115650
All About Speech Analysis 115650
All About Speech Analysis 115650
1. As in all papers, the analysis must include an introduction, body, and conclusion.
2. Start your introduction paragraph with an attention-getter or hook.
3. Make sure your introduction includes a thesis sentence or purpose and previews the
main points covered in the body.
4. State the type of speech being analyzed and where it took place.
5. Be specific.
6. Make informed judgments and critiques of the speech.
7. Make smooth transitions from paragraph to paragraph.
8. Perform a grammar and spelling check.
Introduction
The following paragraph is the introduction to the analysis. It starts with a hook ("a
passionate speech reminding the world of a horrific incident in history"), and it states
where the speech took place. The introduction includes a thesis sentence (shown here
in bold). It previews the main points covered in the body:
Body Paragraphs
The next sections form the body of the analysis. They include specific details from the
speech throughout, and they make informed judgments and critiques of the speech.
Transitional sentences such as "As the speech moved . . . " ensure a smooth flow
between the paragraphs:
Conclusion
The final section is the conclusion. It reviews the thesis and summarizes the analysis:
The Most Important Thing to Analyze: The Speech
Objectives
Knowing the speaker’s objective is critical to analyzing the speech, and should certainly influence how
you study it.
Why is this person delivering this speech? Are they the right person?
A speaker will need to use different techniques to connect with an audience of 1500 than they would
with an audience of 15. Similarly, different techniques will be applied when communicating with
teenagers as opposed to communicating with corporate leaders.
What are the key demographic features of the audience? Technical? Students? Elderly?
Athletes? Business leaders?
In addition to the live audience, is there an external target audience? (e.g. on the Internet or
mass media)
The content of the speech should be selected and organized to achieve the primary speech objective.
Focus is important — extraneous information can weaken an otherwise effective argument.
Were there other speakers before this one? Were their messages similar, opposed, or
unrelated?
Did the introduction establish why the audience should listen to this speaker with this topic at
this time?
What body language was demonstrated by the speaker as they approached the speaking area?
Body language at this moment will often indicate their level of confidence.
Due to the primacy effect, words, body language, and visuals in the speech opening are all critical to
speaking success.
Was a hook used effectively to draw the audience into the speech? Or did the speaker open with
a dry “It’s great to be here today.“
Did the speech open with a story? A joke? A startling statistic? A controversial statement?
A powerful visual?
Did the speech opening clearly establish the intent of the presentation?
Was the presentation focused? i.e. Did all arguments, stories, anecdotes relate back to the
primary objective?
Did the speaker transition smoothly from one part of the presentation to the next?
Like the opening, the words, body language, and visuals in the speech conclusion are all critical to
speaking success. This is due to the recency effect.
Delivery skills are like a gigantic toolbox — the best speakers know precisely when to use every tool and
for what purpose.
Humor
Were appropriate pauses used before and after the punch lines, phrases, or words?
Visual Aids
Was the use of visual aids timed well with the speaker’s words?
Was eye contact effective in connecting the speaker to the whole audience?
Vocal Variety
Was the speaker easy to hear?
Was the speaking pace varied? Was it slow enough overall to be understandable?
Language
What rhetorical devices were used? e.g. repetition, alliteration, the rule of three, etc.
Intangibles
Sometimes, a technically sound speech can still miss the mark. Likewise, technical deficiencies can
sometimes be overcome to produce a must-see presentation. The intangibles are impossible to list, but
here are a few questions to consider: