Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDorthy Carson Modified over 8 years ago
1
Failure to prepare is preparing to fail. —John Wooden
2
Important Things To Know If a student is ABSENT from any class on the morning he/she is scheduled to present, he/she will not be allowed to present on that day. The student will need to present and pass at Make-Up Boards on May 29th in order to meet requirements. The student should arrive by 12:45 pm and must be present as an audience member for the entire afternoon from 1 p.m. until all scheduled presentations are finished. Parents and Mentors are invited to attend presentations and will be ushered into the rooms between presentations. Refreshments will be served in the cafeteria immediately following Boards.
3
Important Things To Know Cont. Score has to average 27 points Questions will be asked after your presentations Questions do not count towards your 8-12 minutes Dress must be professional Reading your speech is an automatic fail Presentations will be May 23 and 24
4
The Importance of Audience Who will be at your presentation? Judges and other audience members How many people will be at your presentation? Minimum of judges, timekeeper, student helper, and other seniors presenting in same room What kinds of things will your audience be expecting to see / hear from you? All things on the speech rubric Emphasis on preparedness, learning stretch, and time
5
Preparing for Your Speech Clarify your purpose State in one sentence your topic and what you want to accomplish Create a thesis statement Restate your “I want” sentence into more developed form specific for audience Information Make sure your information is appropriate and up-to-date
6
Time Guidelines Introduction (10% of your speech) 1-2 minutes Body (80% of your speech) 6-9 minutes 2-3 minutes per main point (if you only have three) Conclusion (including your “thank you’s”) (10% of your speech) 1-2 minutes
7
Writing Your Speech Outline Introduction Body Closing http://hawaii.edu/mauispeech/pdf/infohula.pdf http://hawaii.edu/mauispeech/pdf/infohula.pdf Now, you try! Add Sparkle Supporting Materials Definitions, Narration, Examples, Illustrations, Comparison and Contrast, Factual Data, Explanation, Description, Questions, Testimony Visual Aids Photographs, Models, Video Clips, Handouts, etc. Plan these AFTER you make your speech
8
Organizing Your Speech You MUST have an organizational pattern Spatial Topical Chronological Cause-Effect Problem-Solution You MUST provide transitions First, Second, Third; In the first place, In the second place; For instance, For example, To illustrate; In addition to, Next, Likewise; In the same way, Just like this; In other words, To restate; etc.
9
Introductions The minute you open your mouth, you’ve started Opening designed to introduce thesis, but you must also “bait and hook” to grab your listeners’ attention Focus on audience interest Choose a quotation, brief story, or unusual statement Must answer the question “Why should we listen to YOU?” Involve the listener right away Say “you” and speak specifically to them Establish your credibility by sharing a bit of yourself Tell why the subject is important to you, how you got interested, or why you think the topic relates to your listeners Sounds, visuals, or cleverly focused words will pique your audience’s curiosity and involve them in subject Now, you try!
10
Body Figure out your main points PROVE you actually did your project!!! The history and terminology of golf doesn’t prove you actually learned how to play or improved your game Your last main point should emphasize your self- discovery, explain the “learning stretch,” and reflect on project in terms of life skills and applicability
11
Body Outline Example Main Point 1 Necessary background info., definitions, etc. Main Point 2 Explanation of what you did Be specific Proof that you did it Main Point 3 The self-discovery / learning stretch / reflection part Make sure to include transitions between each Now, you try!
12
Conclusions Ending is the culmination of your speech Your job is to tie your ideas together and focus on your purpose Conclusion should do two major things Summarize your thesis and main points Focus on your purpose Use a well-prepared closing to cement your purpose in your listeners’ minds Now, you try!
13
Additional Resources to Help Introductions http://www.myspeechclass.com/intros.html http://www.myspeechclass.com/intros.html http://www.ehow.com/how_5844162_write-good-introduction- speech.html http://www.ehow.com/how_5844162_write-good-introduction- speech.html http://www.speech-topics-help.com/speech-introduction.html http://www.speech-topics-help.com/speech-introduction.html Body of Speech http://www.myspeechclass.com/writing.html http://www.myspeechclass.com/writing.html http://www.ehow.com/how_7735283_write-body-speech.html http://www.ehow.com/how_7735283_write-body-speech.html http://www.speech-topics-help.com/informative-speech-topics.html (Have to scroll down a bit to get to the good info. Starts at “Bottomline: you, the public speaker, tries to communicate ideas in a powerful way!”) http://www.speech-topics-help.com/informative-speech-topics.html Conclusions http://www.myspeechclass.com/conclude.html http://www.myspeechclass.com/conclude.html http://www.ehow.com/how_6372050_write-conclusion-speech.html http://www.ehow.com/how_6372050_write-conclusion-speech.html http://www.speech-topics-help.com/speech-conclusion.html http://www.speech-topics-help.com/speech-conclusion.html
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.