speech-chapter 16 Flashcards
speech
Persuasion
The process of creating, reinforcing, or changing people’s beliefs or actions.
Mental Dialogue with the audience
The mental give-and-take between speaker and listener during a persuasive speech.
Target audience
The portion of the whole audience that the speaker most wants to persuade.
Question of Fact
A question about the truth or falsity of an assertion.
Question of Value
A question about the worth, rightness, morality, and so forth of an idea or action.
Question of Policy
A question about wether a specific course of action should or should not be taken.
Speech to gain passive agreement
A persuasive speech in which the speaker’s goal is to convince the audience that a given policy is desirable without encouraging the audience to take action in support of the policy.
Speech to gain immediate action
A persuasive speech in which the speaker’s goal is to convince the audience to take action in support of a given policy.
Need
The first basic issue in analyzing a question of policy: Is there a serious problem or need that requires a change from current policy?
Burden of proof
The obligation facing a persuasive speaker to prove that a change from current policy is necessary.
Plan
The second basic issue in analyzing a question of policy. If there is a problem with current policy, does the speaker have a plan to solve the problem?
Practicality
The third basic issue in analyzing a question of policy. Will the speaker’s plan solve the problem? Will it create new and more serious problem?
Problem-solution order
A method of organizing persuasive speeches in which the first main point deals with the existence of a problem and the second main point presents a solution to the problem.
Problem-cause-solution order
A method of organizing persuasive speeches in which the first main point identifies a problem, the second main point analyzes the causes of the problem, and the third main point presents a solution to the problem.
Comparative Advantages Order
A method of organizing persuasive speeches in which each main point explains why a speakers’s solution to a problem is preferable to other proposed solutions.
Monroe’s Motivated sequence
A method of organizing persuasive speeches that seek immediate action. The five steps of the motivated sequence are attention, need, satisfaction, visualization, and action.