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Chapter Four Ethical Public Speaking
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Chapter Three Table of Contents zEthical Speaking and Responsibility zValues: The Foundation of Ethical Speaking zGround Rules for Ethical Speaking zPlagiarism
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Ethical Speaking and Responsibility zEthics: study of moral conduct, or how people should act toward one another zIn public speaking, the responsibilities speakers have toward their audience and themselves
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Ethical Speaking and Responsibility zEthics, Ethos, and Speaker Credibility zFree Speech and the Speaker’s Responsibility
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Ethical Speaking and Responsibility: Ethics, Ethos, and Speaker Credibility zEthos : a Greek word meaning character zPositive Ethos includes competence, good moral character, goodwill
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Ethical Speaking and Responsibility: Ethics, Ethos, and Speaker Credibility Speaker credibility yBelievability of speaker ySound reasoning skills yHonesty yGenuine interest in the welfare of their listeners
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Ethical Speaking and Responsibility: Free Speech and the Speaker’s Responsibility zThe First Amendment guarantees freedom of speech. zFighting words often provoke people to violence and are not protected under free speech.
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Values: The Foundation of Ethical Speaking zValues: people’s judgments of what’s good, bad, and important zThey are culturally determined by family, schools, and religious organizations.
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Values: The Foundation of Ethical Speaking zValue Conflicts and Ethical Dilemmas zRecognizing and Respecting Listener’s Values
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Values: The Foundation of Ethical Speaking: Value Conflicts and Ethical Dilemmas zThe more diverse the society, the greater these clashes tend to be. zRecognizing audience values is very important for a speaker.
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Values: The Foundation of Ethical Speaking: Recognizing and Respecting Listeners’ Values Identify your listeners’ values, attitudes, and beliefs to the topic and the occasion. yUse surveys and interviews yUse Milton Rokeach’s model to conduct a values assessment
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Values: The Foundation of Ethical Speaking: Respecting Listeners’ Values Milton Rokeach’s model z Terminal values yDesirable in themselves z Instrumental values yCharacteristics people possess.
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Ground Rules for Ethical Speaking zDignity : feeling worthy, honored, or respected zIntegrity: incorruptibility zDignity and integrity should infuse every aspect of a speech.
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Ground Rules for Ethical Speaking zTrustworthiness zRespect zResponsibility zFairness
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Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking: Trustworthiness zTrustworthiness: a combination of honesty and dependability xReveal your true purpose. xAvoid misleading, deceptive, or false information. xAcknowledge sources.
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Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking: Respect zRespect: addressing audience members as unique human beings yFocuses on issues yAllows the audience the power of rational choice. yAvoids in-group and out-group distinctions.
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Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking: Respect zStereotypes : generalizations about an apparent characteristic of a group that are applied to all its members zHate Speech: offensive communication directed against people’s racial, ethnic, religious, gender, sexual, or other characteristics
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Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking: Responsibility The responsible speaker considers the following: yTopic and purpose yEvidence and reasoning yAccuracy yHonest use of emotional appeals
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Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking: Fairness zFairness: a genuine and open-minded attempt to see all sides of an issue
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Plagiarism zPlagiarism: the use of other people’s ideas or words without acknowledging the source zAny source that requires credit in written form should be acknowledged in oral form.
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Plagiarism zDirect Quotations zParaphrased Information
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Plagiarism: Direct Quotations zDirect quotations: statements made verbatim (word for word) by someone else
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Plagiarism: Paraphrased Information zParaphrase : a restatement of someone else’s statements, ideas, or written work in the speaker’s own words
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Plagiarism: Paraphrased Information zAny data other than that gathered by you should be cited.
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