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

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Persuasive Outline Part 2

Persuasive Outline Part 2

Q Adding Substance to Your Speech- Your assignment here is to complete the main points in the body of your speech outline by incorporating personal perspective and outside research from quality sources. As you learned in the reading (Chapters 7 and 8) and the Resource Assessment Activity, research must be credible (whether you are using academic or non-academic materials) in order for you the speaker to be seen as credible to your audience. You are urged to locate academic resources first, then turn to non-academic resources if necessary. If you do use non-academic materials to support your ideas, you'll need to use this document Guidelines for Assessing Internet Research.pdf Actions to evaluate those sources. Remember, within the body of your speech, you'll want to balance: • personal story, experience, and examples, along with • facts, figures, statistics, reasoning, and expert testimony (or quotes) Section 8.2 describes all the types of support listed above. Study this section as you begin to investigate what are the best ways to convince your audience to do what you want them to do or why you want them to change their minds. This is the "heart" of persuasion. Use a variety of ways to "move your audience" or to "prove your point," but make sure your research materials are "quality" and credible. Again, we suggest you use the following Ohiolink databases to research: List of Scholarly Journals: https://egcc.libguides.com/az.php (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.) (Academic Search Complete is a useful database for general research. It's first on the list.) Library Username and Password Instructions (Links to an external site.) Submit a Question for a Librarian (Links to an external site.) Call: (740) 264-5591 x.1653 Text: (740) 240-6998 Chat when you see the Gator: Review the following document to see what sections we are focusing on with this assignment: Working Outline- Body of the Speech-1.doc Actions Here's a student example of what your assignment will look like at the end of this week: LF outline 2.docx Actions Use this document Persuasive Outline Form - Blueprint.doc Actions to add your materials to the body of the speech. Adding Oral Citations- Remember: when you go to add your research materials into your outline, use oral citations. That means you do not need to concern yourself with using either MLA or APA citations or completing a Works Cited page or Bibliography. Review Chapter 7.3 for the correct way to cite a source inside your speech using oral citations. The following videos reinforce text materials: Citing Sources in a Speech John Tindell. (2019, January 20). Citing Sources in a Speech [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PB244Krb6hM How to Do Oral Citations John Fisher. (2010, February 26). How to do oral citations in speeches [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GYrTOmnAt0 Orally Citing a Source in a Speech Janene Davison. (2015, April 24). Orally Citing a Source in a Speech [Video]. YouTube.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eP0bfnRlJVY (Links to an external site.) Assessment: There is no rubric for this week's assignment. You can receive up to • 15 pts. for three main points clearly organized and developed using your own personal perspective and experience in the speech body (that's 5 pts. per main point) • 15 pts. for including a minimum of 3 different (quality) resources (that's 5 pts. per source) • 15 pts. for correctly citing those 3 sources (that's 5 pts. per correct oral citation) That's a grand total of 45 pts. for the body of the speech outline. ---------------------------------------------- Once you've completed your work for this week, go ahead and copy and paste the portions of your outline you completed previously, and upload all of it to the Assignment Link. At this point, you should have completed the following sections of your outline: • Thesis and Preview of Main Points in the Introduction • All 3 main points within the Body of the Speech (including research) • Summary of Main Points in the Conclusion We'll fill-in and "fine-tune" the last portions of the Introduction and Conclusion (as well as add in Transitions) during the next unit. PreviousNext

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