Student Solution

-->

"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world”
– Nelson Mandela

1 University

1 Course

1 Subject

Class Participation 4

Class Participation 4

Q Directions: Choose 2 of your group members and pay close attention to their speeches (you will choose 2 different group members to peer review for the next speech). Be sure to check the Presentation Order, because you may end up doing both peer reviews on the same day or one peer review on both days. Take a few notes on the following categories for their speech: 1) Content - the actual topic of their speech and how they teach it; 2) Organization - the structure of their speech (Introduction, Body, Conclusion); 3) Delivery - the verbal and nonverbal aspects of their delivery (volume, speech rate, gestures, etc.). You will choose just one of those categories to focus on in your peer review, to make things simple and focused. Then, respond to your group's Peer Review discussion board with feedback for each group member's speech using the D-R-E Method of feedback (see pg. 52 of the textbook for further description and examples): D = Describe what you heard; R = Respond with your personal interpretations and reactions; E = Evaluate by critiquing what you found effective and what could be improved. *Doing this should result in a full paragraph response (~7 sentences) for each of your group members, so 2 paragraphs total. Be sure to identify whose speech is being addressed by each paragraph.*

View Related Questions

Solution Preview

This review is going to be for Anna. I want to start off by saying your demonstrative speech on how to make a banana egg pancake for a healthy breakfast was awesome. I felt like you did a great job of sharing your experience with the recipe. Also felt like you took our class demographics in consideration when you chose this topic. Your steps were very clear. I felt like they would be easy to follow if we were to try this recipe at home. I think if I was going to recommend something I would suggest pausing to make sure the audience is processing the information.