33 Speaking Effectively

Page
451
from

Speaking Effectively Chapter Opener

Start-Up Activity

Play for students excerpts from famous speeches in United States history.

Ask what makes these speeches so powerful. Students will probably offer a number of observations:

  • Each speech occurred at a critical moment in history.
  • The speakers connected to the audience.
  • The audience was international.
  • The words perfectly captured the moment.
  • Each speech clearly communicated its subject and achieved its purpose.

Tell students that they have just identified the key traits of effective speeches. Each part of the communication situation works: the speaker, the message, the medium, the audience, and the context. Let them know that this chapter can help them speak effectively as well.

Think About It

“A voice is a human gift; it should be cherished and used, to utter fully human speech as possible. Powerlessness and silence go together.”

—Margaret Atwood

Page 452 from Write for College

Preparing the Speech

This chapter works best if you assign students to develop and deliver their own speeches. They should start thinking about their speeches by analyzing the communication situation using the PAST questions:

  • What is the Purpose of my speech?
  • Who is my Audience?
  • What Subject do I want to speak about?
  • What Type of speech should I deliver?

Use the rest of this page to help students narrow their general subjects to specific topics, as well as narrow the type of speech to a specific form, style, and method of delivery.

LAFS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

Form:
English Language Arts:

Page 453 from Write for College

Organizing the Speech

Like anything designed to be experienced sequentially, speeches need to have an introduction, a body, and a conclusion. The introduction must get listeners' attention, provide background, preview the information to come, and deliver a clear focus/thesis.

The strategies on this page can help students start strong, getting listeners' attention. Students probably have heard, "It's good to start a speech with a joke" or ". . . with an anecdote" and so on. Help them understand the purpose of these strategies: to hook listeners' attention. The only way students can successfully communicate is to get people to redirect their attention from a thousand distractions and focus for a few minutes on what the speaker is saying.

Have students experiment with different opening strategies as they write the introductions for their speeches. The model speech on pages 458–460 shows how one student opened with a set of scenarios.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

Form:
English Language Arts:

Page 454 from Write for College

Developing the Body and Conclusion

The body of the speech delivers the specific information promised by the introduction. Students should organize the body of their speeches according to their topic and purpose. Review with them the seven patterns of organization. Then ask them to identify the purpose of their speech and name the pattern of organization that would work well for it.

Have students structure the central sections of their speeches. For inspiration, they can review the model speech on pages 458–460.

Also review conclusion strategies, helping students wrap up their ideas in a form that listeners can hold onto. Have them write their conclusions.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

Form:
English Language Arts:

Page 455 from Write for College

Rehearsing and Delivering the Speech

Though students may have written out their speeches word-for-word, they often will not deliver them that way. Simply reading a speech from a page can be deadly. The speaker spends the whole time looking down rather than connecting with the audience. And rote delivery with flat tone convinces the listener that even the speaker is not interested in what is being said.

As TED talks demonstrate, fully memorized speeches with no note cards are the most engaging, but most students will have neither the time nor the confidence to go this route. This page helps them find a happy medium, somewhere between full memorization and rote recitation.

A list or outline provides that middle ground. It captures the opening and closing lines, thesis, main points, and details, but requires the speaker to paraphrase those ideas. A list or outline gives a student structure while letting the person speak naturally. It provides a safety net instead of a cage.

Lead students through their options, and then have them prepare their speeches for presentation.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

Form:
English Language Arts:

Page 456 from Write for College

Rehearsing the Speech

Public speaking is a performance art. As such, it is first and foremost about connecting with an audience. A speaker who fails to connect cannot effectively communicate.

Actors onstage know that audiences ask themselves two questions at the beginning of each performance:

  • Does this person know what he or she is doing? (The actor gets about 10 seconds to elicit a "yes" from the audience. Otherwise it shuts down.)
  • Do I like what this person is doing? (The actor gets about two minutes after the first "yes" to elicit the second "yes." An actor who gets both can do just about anything, and the audience will gladly go along.)

Use the tips on this page (and the effective opening strategies on page 453) to help students get the audience to say "yes" twice.

Use the bottom of the page to help students mark up manuscript speeches, making sure to use inflection and incorporate visuals (page 457).

Have students practice their speeches.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

Form:
English Language Arts:

Page 457 from Write for College

Using Visual Aids

Visual aids need to be visual. The perennial failure of PowerPoint presentations is presenting information mostly through words. Though a slide can highlight key details, it should do so in a visual, memorable way.

The two slides on this page help the speaker wrap up the speech. They summarize the benefits and drawbacks of "offshoring" using text, but the main feature is an image that connects emotionally with the audience.

Help students develop slides for their presentations. Students should especially consider graphs or diagrams that demonstrate their points. Industrious students could also incorporate props, making their points all the more real. Encourage students to show their audiences what they mean instead of simply telling them about it.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

Form:
English Language Arts:

Page 458 from Write for College

Model Speech

Have students read this model speech to themselves. (Having a student read it aloud to the class would only reinforce the unrehearsed, deadpan delivery that students should avoid.) After they read the speech, use the side notes to point out its key features.

Then play parts of a few effective TED talks to demonstrate how to deliver an effective speech. Look for TED talks that relate to topics you are currently studying. Encourage students to adopt the best strategies that they witness from expert presenters.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

Form:
English Language Arts:

Page 459 from Write for College

Model Speech (Cont.)

On this page of the model speech, show how the speaker uses different types of details for different purposes. The statistics ground the topic in reality, helping listeners quantify the ideas. The anecdotes help the audience make an emotional connection to the topic, feeling that they are experiencing it firsthand.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

Form:
English Language Arts:

Page 460 from Write for College

Model Speech (Cont.)

Have students complete their review of the model speech. Show how the conclusion brings the two sides of the debate together, helping listeners take away suggestions. This pararaph could be amplified by the slides shown on page 457, reviewing the benefits and drawbacks of offshoring. By reducing drawbacks and amplifying benefits, both sides can survive in a global economy.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

Form:
English Language Arts:

Page 461 from Write for College

Conducting Interviews

This page will be most fruitful if students actually must interview someone, whether for a formal assignment (speech or essay) or as a role-playing exercise. Present this information to help students prepare for their interviews.

Stress to students that a successful interview begins long before the parties meet. Preparation is key.

Lead students through the steps of preparing for an interview. Focus especially on the quality of questions, avoiding those that require just a "yes" or "no" response. Use the minilesson to help students develop better questions for their interviews.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

English Language Arts:

Page 462 from Write for College

Doing the Interview and Following Up

Before students conduct their interviews, lead them through the tips on this page. Then assign students to interview their subjects.

Afterward, have the interviewer respond to the interviewee. If you ask students to respond via email, they can include you as a recipient so that you can witness the interaction.

LAFS Standard:
TEKS Standard:
NE ELA Standard:

Related Resource Tags

Click to view a list of tags that tie into other resources on our site

English Language Arts: