The document provides guidance on structuring a speech by determining the purpose, developing a thesis statement and central idea, and organizing the speech in a clear structure. It recommends identifying the general function as to inform, persuade, or entertain, then determining a specific purpose. The body should be structured with 3 or fewer main points arranged logically and supported by evidence. Transitions should connect the ideas to make the speech cohesive.
The document provides guidance on structuring a speech by determining the purpose, developing a thesis statement and central idea, and organizing the speech in a clear structure. It recommends identifying the general function as to inform, persuade, or entertain, then determining a specific purpose. The body should be structured with 3 or fewer main points arranged logically and supported by evidence. Transitions should connect the ideas to make the speech cohesive.
The document provides guidance on structuring a speech by determining the purpose, developing a thesis statement and central idea, and organizing the speech in a clear structure. It recommends identifying the general function as to inform, persuade, or entertain, then determining a specific purpose. The body should be structured with 3 or fewer main points arranged logically and supported by evidence. Transitions should connect the ideas to make the speech cohesive.
The document provides guidance on structuring a speech by determining the purpose, developing a thesis statement and central idea, and organizing the speech in a clear structure. It recommends identifying the general function as to inform, persuade, or entertain, then determining a specific purpose. The body should be structured with 3 or fewer main points arranged logically and supported by evidence. Transitions should connect the ideas to make the speech cohesive.
• Determine your specific purpose • Develop a clearly worded thesis statement and central idea General function
• The most basic functions of speeches are –
✓To inform ✓To persuade ✓To entertain/celebrate Specific purpose Your specific purpose is what you would like to accomplish in your speech. It – • Identifies precisely what you want your listeners to understand, believe, feel, or do. • Helps direct your research toward relevant information You have to state your specific purpose clearly and succinctly a single idea in single infinitive phrase. Your specific purpose should be manageable in the time allotted to you. examples ➢ Topic : Tourism in Bangladesh General Function : To inform Specific Purpose : To inform my audience about some less-popular tourist spots in Bangladesh
➢ Topic : Tourism in Bangladesh
General Function : To persuade Specific Purpose : To persuade my audience about the reasons for choosing Bangladesh as their favorite tourist spot over others Tips for Formulating the Specific Purpose statement • Write the purpose statement as a full infinitive phrase, not as fragment. • Express your purpose as a statement, not as a question. • Avoid figurative language in your purpose statement. • Limit your purpose statement to one distinct idea. • Make sure your specific purpose is not too vague or general. Thesis Statement
Thesis statement reflects the specific purpose. It
condenses your message into a single declarative phrase. It is usually offered as you introduce your speech so that listeners understand your intention. Central Idea/Preview
Central Idea signals the main points that will
develop in the body of the speech. Example Topic : Tourism in Bangladesh General function : To inform Specific Purpose : To inform my audience about the less-popular tourist spots in Bangladesh Thesis Statement : There are many beautiful places in Bangladesh yet to be explored by the tourists. Central Idea : I would like to introduce three very promising tourist spots in Bangladesh – A, B, and C which are still behind the curtain. Acquiring Responsible Knowledge Once you have your specific purpose and thesis statement clearly in mind, you can move onto the concentrated phase of research that will provide you with responsible knowledge. These can be gathered from – ✓ Personal experience ✓ Library search (encyclopedias, atlases, biographical information, books of quotations) ✓ Government documents ✓ Electronic databases (internet, online newspaper, magazines etc.) ✓ Interview Structuring your speech
“Every discourse ought to be a living creature;
having a body of its own and head and feet; there should be a middle, beginning, and end, adapted to one another and to the whole.” - Plato Principles of good form The structure of a speech should follow the ways people naturally see and arrange things in their minds. They cluster material so that it can be more easily recalled; for example, as we recall telephone numbers. Once grouped, information is organized according to a few basic principles. When these principles are satisfied, a speech has a good form. Good form depends on – ➢ Simplicity ➢ Balance ➢ Order Simplicity The more simple your speech design, the easier it will be for the listeners to follow, understand, and remember your message. To achieve simplicity you should limit your number of main ideas in your speech and keep each direct and to the point. simplicity ➢ Number of main points: In general, the fewer main points you have, the better. Each main point of your message must be developed with supporting materials. And, each main point breaks down into more specific sub-points that extend and explain its meaning. These ideas might be clustered into a simpler structural pattern. Short classroom speeches usually should have no more than three main points. Even longer speeches, should not consist of more than five points. Simplicity
➢Phrasing the main points:
You should state your main points as simply as possible. Wording of these points should be made clear and direct. Parallel phrasing is helpful. This strategic repetition helps listeners remember the message. Balance Balance means that all the major parts of your speech-introduction, body, and conclusion- receive the right amount of emphasis and development. It depends largely upon timing. It can be very disconcerting to find yourself finishing the first main point of your speech with only one minute left and two more main points plus conclusion to cover. Balance The following suggestions may be helpful to realize how major parts of speeches should be balanced:- ➢ The body should be the longest ➢ Allocate time according to your topic: ✓ One way to balance your main points is to give the same amount of development, which suggests that the main points are equally important. ✓ Another approach is to arrange in order of their importance in descending or ascending order, spending proportionately more/less time on each. ➢ The introduction and conclusion should be approximately equal in length Order An orderly speech follows a consistent pattern of development. You should develop the body first so that your introduction and conclusion fit your message. To be better orderly, you can try to tie the introduction and conclusion; for example, if the introduction asked any question, the conclusion could supply answer based on the ideas from the speech. You also have to arrange the main points in order; for example, if you want to propose a solution to a problem, you should first present the problem, and then the solution. Structuring the body Because the body of your speech contains the major substance of your message, you should organize it first. In developing the body of your speech. You have three major tasks to accomplish: ✓Determine your main points ✓Arrange your main points effectively ✓Decide how to use supporting materials Determine your main points
• Look for stressed or repeated themes by
preparing research overview • how those relate to your specific purpose, thesis statement • How relevant they are to the needs and interests of your listeners Arrange your main points
Once you have determined your main points,
you must decide how to arrange them. Some basic speech designs that relate to these principles of orderliness are: ➢Principle of Similarity ➢Principle of Proximity ➢Principle of Closure Principle of Similarity
Leads people to group things together that
they seem alike This tendency underlies the categorical design for speeches. Speakers use categories based on the actual division of a topic to represent customary ways of thinking about a subject. Principle of Proximity
• Things that occur close together in time or
space should be presented in the order in which they naturally occur • Uses sequential or spatial design for speeches Principle of Closure
• Based on the natural tendency of people to
seek completion • Applies to especially cause-effect and problem- solution designs for speech Adding Supporting materials Once you have framed and arranged your main points, you must support them with facts and figures, testimony, examples, or narratives to make the speech sturdy and reliable. A probable sequence can be:
Statement of main points - facts/figures/testimony/examples/narratives –
transitions-next main point Using Connectives Connectives show your listeners how your ideas connect with each other. Listeners focus on the message you have already discussed and prepare them for what is still to come. There are four kinds of transitions used in speeches. They are: ➢Transitions ➢Internal Preview ➢Internal Summary ➢Signposts Connectives A word or phrase that connects the ideas of a speech and indicates the relationship between them. Connectives in the body of a speech are like ligaments and tendons in a human body. Without connectives, a speech is disjointed and Uncoordinated - much as a person would be without ligaments and tendons to join the bones and hold the organs in place. Transitions ❑Transitions are words or phrases that indicate when a speaker has just completed one thought and is moving on to another. ❑Technically, the transitions state both the idea the speaker is leaving and the idea she or he is coming up to. ❑Without transitions, a speech will seem disjointed and uncoordinated. Internal Preview A statement in the body of a speech that lets the audience know what the speaker is going to discuss next. They are more detailed than transitions. They are rarely necessary for every main point. Sometimes, introduction can be used as preview. Internal Summary Internal summaries remind listeners of what they have just heard. Internal summaries are especially useful when a speaker finishes a complex or important point. They clarify and reinforce the speaker’s ideas. • Specially useful in cause-effect and problem- solution speeches, where they can span the gap between the two dimensions of the design. Signposts • Signposts are brief statement that indicate exactly where a speaker is in the speech or that focus attention on key ideas. • Signpost can be numerical (first, second, third etc) • Question also work well as signpost. • So do phrases such as “Be sure to keep this in mind,” ‘Above all, you need to know,’ and the like. Introducing your message An invitation to listen When you first begin to speak, the audience will have two basic questions: ✓ Why should I listen to this speech? ✓ Why should I listen to this speaker? • Basic functions of an introduction: ➢ Capture attention and excites interest so that listeners want to listen ➢ Should help establish your ethos as a competent, trustworthy and likeable person ➢ Should help focus and preview your message to make it easier for the audience to follow Capturing attention • “Good morning. The topic of my speech is…” and then jump right into the message is NOT effective – because it neither invites the audience to listen nor makes them want to • Good ways to attract and hold attention: ✓ Involve the audience; for example, by praising them or relating the topic directly to their lives ✓ Relating the topic to personal experience because the audience is more willing to listen to others if they know that someone or themselves have travelled the road; it also establishes common ground ✓ Ask rhetorical question to arouse curiosity and to get the listeners involved; for example, any narrative or hypothetical example ✓ Create suspense and startle the audience ✓ Tell a story, use humor or begin with a quotation that is relevant to your topic Establishing credibility • Establish ethos – competence, integrity, likableness, and forcefulness ✓ Well organized speech, using language correctly and ably, smooth flow of your speech, using facts, talking from personal experience creates feeling of your competence ✓ Being ethical and honest along with straightforward, sincere and concerned shows your integrity ✓ Pleasant and tactful behavior, treating listeners as friends, sharing feelings makes you likeable ✓ Your self-confidence, smiling, establishing eye contact etc. makes your speech forceful Focusing and Previewing your message
✓Focus on the thesis statement
✓Preview foreshadows the main points Developing conclusion • Consists: ➢Summary statement: functions as a transition between the body and the final remarks ➢Concluding remarks: offers a sense of closure • Your concluding remarks can include: ✓Involving the audience ✓Asking rhetorical questions ✓Telling story/finishing the story started in the beginning ✓Closing with a quotation related to the topic