Public Speaking: A Transactional ApproachAllyn and Bacon, 1985 - 226 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 55
Page 35
... specific purpose and ( 2 ) the central idea . Specific Purpose The specific purpose of your speech , much like behavioral objectives in teaching , is the specific response you desire from your listeners when you have completed your ...
... specific purpose and ( 2 ) the central idea . Specific Purpose The specific purpose of your speech , much like behavioral objectives in teaching , is the specific response you desire from your listeners when you have completed your ...
Page 53
... specific examples of robberies or Court decisions . You have at your disposal general , hypothetical , and specific examples . " It would be scary to live in a country where the government was unstable — just look at Iran ” is a ...
... specific examples of robberies or Court decisions . You have at your disposal general , hypothetical , and specific examples . " It would be scary to live in a country where the government was unstable — just look at Iran ” is a ...
Page 134
... specific preparation for specific speaking events varies rather widely . I will discuss impromptu , extemporaneous , and manuscript speeches . Impromptu . Speeches that appear to be unprepared are called impromptu speeches . You have ...
... specific preparation for specific speaking events varies rather widely . I will discuss impromptu , extemporaneous , and manuscript speeches . Impromptu . Speeches that appear to be unprepared are called impromptu speeches . You have ...
Contents
Analyzing the Transactional | 15 |
Analyze the Social Situation | 26 |
William Jennings Bryan Cross of Gold | 139 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
achieve American appeal approach attention audience become begin behavior believe better body called cause central idea Chapter characteristics claim communication competence concepts consider Constitution continue course delivery demonstrated developed discuss earlier effective enhance event examples experience feel final functions give hand heart human humorous identify important individual interest introduction involved issue language less listeners live look major materials meaning meeting motivation nature never organization outline particular party perhaps person persuasive possible practice preparation present President principles probably problem public communication public speaking question reason recent relate represent require response seen sentence share situation social sound speaker specific speech statistics style things topic transaction understand usually values variables vary voice