Extemp Practice. Speech Structure Always write your BODY first You should always have THREE main...
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Transcript of Extemp Practice. Speech Structure Always write your BODY first You should always have THREE main...
Extemp Practice
Speech Structure
• Always write your BODY first
• You should always have THREE main points
• You can have “stock” bullets, such as “problem, cause, solution” or “local, state, national” or “past, present, future” rather than coming up with 3 random points
Speech Structure
• Your BODY points should always contain the following structure for EACH main point:• CLAIM 1• SUPPORT• ANALYIS / IMPACT• CLAIM 2• SUPPORT• ANALYIS / IMPACT
Speech Structure
• CLAIM
• This is a statement you make (Obama will be elected the next President of the U.S.)
• You cannot, must not, no never ever, make claim after claim without BACKING UP YOUR OPINIONS…
Speech Structure• SUPPORT for your claims• Ask yourself, WHY? HOW DO I KNOW THIS?• This comes in the form of
• EVIDENCE (statistics, experts’ quoted opinions, studies performed, graphs, percentages, etc.)
• EXAMPLES (scenarios, proverbs, sayings, comparisons/contrasts)
• You MUST give credit to the source (ex. “According to a 2008 Gallop Poll, youth voting is expected to rise by 42 % in the next election, and 68% of those youths support Obama.”)
Speech Structure
• ANALYSIS of your Support and How it Impacts & Relates to your Claim
• ex. Therefore, as the rise in younger voter turnout continues, society should see a definite trend in more liberal viewpoints, more focused on issues such as college tuition reimbursement, which is one of Obama’s concerns, as well.
Speech Structure
• Therefore,
• Claim – Obama will win
• Support – Gallop poll, showing rise in youth vote in support of Obama
• Analysis – A rise in youth support will increase electoral votes in more liberal states, thus leading to a win for Obama
Speech Structure• Next, write your INTRODUCTION• Attention-getter (opening joke, personal story,
interesting or funny anecdote, children’s story, shocking statistic, news story)
• Credibility – How are you qualified to speak on this issue? (A struggling high school student myself, it is getting harder to balance working to afford gas while also attending school)
• Link to the Audience – Why should we listen/care? (As Americans, we are all concerned with the recent rise in gas and oil prices)
Speech Structure• INTRODUCTION (cont.)• ANSWER YOUR QUESTION – So, how will
increases in the cost of fuel impact the U.S. Economy? By causing a slow spiral toward another Great Depression.
• SIGNPOST – (preview your main points) To understand the full effects on the economy, we must examine this issue from he local level, state level, and finally, the national level.
Speech Structure• Write the CONCLUSION last
• Include a SUMMARY of your main ideas• Include a CLINCHER - final thought, end
to the opening story, final example or statistic, etc.
• DON’T end with “I’m done” “The End” or anything else, just let it lie
EXTEMP Overview• You have 30 minutes to prepare• Draw 3 topics• Choose one
• Choose the one you know something about• Choose the one you know we have research about• Choose the one you know you can speak for 5-7 minutes
about
• Return remaining topics to the envelope
Step One
• Spend 5 minutes researching your topic
• Try to locate a specific folder on your topic first
• If there is nothing directly on your topic, search for possible sources you can easily link to your topic through transitions and analysis
Step Two
• Spend 10 minutes writing the BODY of your speech
• Be sure to have THREE CLEAR MAIN POINTS• Be sure to have at least one research source per main
point• Cite the full source of the article• Articles can be paraphrased
Step Three• Spend 5 minutes writing the INTRO and
CONCLUSION of your speech• Be sure to include your attention-getter, credibility,
link to the audience, your ANSWER to the question, and don’t forget the SIGNPOST (preview to the body)
• Be sure to include your summary of main points and a strong clincher
Step Four
• Spend 10 minutes rehearsing your speech
• Be sure to go over it several times aloud
Delivery
• Don’t forget to MOVE on each main point
• Don’t fidget, rock or sway, or grab your clothes/hair – PLANT YOUR FEET
• Don’t forget to GESTURE
• Speak with a conversational style, yet poised
• Speak with a smile & CONFIDENCE!
Delivery
• Utilize what you’ve learned about VOCALICS
• Vary your rate, volume, pitch and tone for effect and for impact
• Utilize PAUSES to allow your audience to let a point to sink in before moving on
Off to your Room!
• Take your topic to your room with you!• When it’s your turn, hand the topic to your judge
and take your place.• When the judge appears ready, begin your speech.• When you conclude, you should thank your judge,
and RETURN to the auditorium to re-file and clean your research area.