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Oral-Communications Q2 Module-3

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Public Affairs Council

Speechwriting 101: Writing an Effective Speech

Whether you are a communications pro or a human resources executive, the time will come when you will need to write a speech for yourself or someone else.  when that time comes, your career may depend on your success..

J. Lyman MacInnis, a corporate coach,  Toronto Star  columnist, accounting executive and author of  “ The Elements of Great Public Speaking ,”  has seen careers stalled – even damaged – by a failure to communicate messages effectively before groups of people. On the flip side, solid speechwriting skills can help launch and sustain a successful career.  What you need are forethought and methodical preparation.

Know Your Audience

Learn as much as possible about the audience and the event.  This will help you target the insights, experience or knowledge you have that this group wants or needs:

  • Why has the audience been brought together?
  • What do the members of the audience have in common?
  • How big an audience will it be?
  • What do they know, and what do they need to know?
  • Do they expect discussion about a specific subject and, if so, what?
  • What is the audience’s attitude and knowledge about the subject of your talk?
  • What is their attitude toward you as the speaker?
  • Why are they interested in your topic?

Choose Your Core Message

If the core message is on target, you can do other things wrong. But if the message is wrong, it doesn’t matter what you put around it.  To write the most effective speech, you should have significant knowledge about your topic, sincerely care about it and be eager to talk about it.  Focus on a message that is relevant to the target audience, and remember: an audience wants opinion. If you offer too little substance, your audience will label you a lightweight.  If you offer too many ideas, you make it difficult for them to know what’s important to you.

Research and Organize

Research until you drop.  This is where you pick up the information, connect the ideas and arrive at the insights that make your talk fresh.  You’ll have an easier time if you gather far more information than you need.  Arrange your research and notes into general categories and leave space between them. Then go back and rearrange. Fit related pieces together like a puzzle.

Develop Structure to Deliver Your Message

First, consider whether your goal is to inform, persuade, motivate or entertain.  Then outline your speech and fill in the details:

  • Introduction – The early minutes of a talk are important to establish your credibility and likeability.  Personal anecdotes often work well to get things started.  This is also where you’ll outline your main points.
  • Body – Get to the issues you’re there to address, limiting them to five points at most.  Then bolster those few points with illustrations, evidence and anecdotes.  Be passionate: your conviction can be as persuasive as the appeal of your ideas.
  • Conclusion – Wrap up with feeling as well as fact. End with something upbeat that will inspire your listeners.

You want to leave the audience exhilarated, not drained. In our fast-paced age, 20-25 minutes is about as long as anyone will listen attentively to a speech. As you write and edit your speech, the general rule is to allow about 90 seconds for every double-spaced page of copy.

Spice it Up

Once you have the basic structure of your speech, it’s time to add variety and interest.  Giving an audience exactly what it expects is like passing out sleeping pills. Remember that a speech is more like conversation than formal writing.  Its phrasing is loose – but without the extremes of slang, the incomplete thoughts, the interruptions that flavor everyday speech.

  • Give it rhythm. A good speech has pacing.
  • Vary the sentence structure. Use short sentences. Use occasional long ones to keep the audience alert. Fragments are fine if used sparingly and for emphasis.
  • Use the active voice and avoid passive sentences. Active forms of speech make your sentences more powerful.
  • Repeat key words and points. Besides helping your audience remember something, repetition builds greater awareness of central points or the main theme.
  • Ask rhetorical questions in a way that attracts your listeners’ attention.
  • Personal experiences and anecdotes help bolster your points and help you connect with the audience.
  • Use quotes. Good quotes work on several levels, forcing the audience to think. Make sure quotes are clearly attributed and said by someone your audience will probably recognize.

Be sure to use all of these devices sparingly in your speeches. If overused, the speech becomes exaggerated. Used with care, they will work well to move the speech along and help you deliver your message in an interesting, compelling way.

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  • —Communicative Competence Strategies In Various Speech Situations

Using Principles of Effective Speech Writing Focusing on Audience Profile and Logical Organization View Download

Learning Material  |  PDF

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12.5 Organizing Principles for Your Speech

Learning objective.

  • Identify and understand how to use at least five different organizing principles for a speech.

There are many different ways to organize a speech, and none is “better” or “more correct” than the others. The choice of an organizing principle , or a core assumption around which everything else is arranged, depends on the subject matter, the rhetorical situation, and many other factors, including your preference as speaker.

The left column of Table 12.6 “Sample Organizing Principles for a Speech” presents seventeen different organizing principles to consider. The center column explains how the principle works, and the right column provides an applied example based on our sample speech about the First Transcontinental Railroad. For example, using a biographical organizing principle, you might describe the journey of the Lewis and Clark expedition in 1804; the signing of the Pacific Railroad Act in 1862, and the completion of the first Transcontinental Express train trip in 1876. As another example, using a spatial organizing principle, you might describe the mechanics of how a steam locomotive engine works to turn the train wheels, which move on a track to travel across distances.

As you read each organizational structure, consider how the main points and subheadings might change or be adapted to meet each pattern.

Table 12.6 Sample Organizing Principles for a Speech

Key Takeaway

A speech may be organized according to any of many different organizing principles.

  • Choose at least three different organizing principles from the left column of Table 12.6 “Sample Organizing Principles for a Speech” . Take the thesis of a speech you are preparing and write an applied example, similar to the ones provided about the First Transcontinental Railroad that shows how you would apply each of your chosen organizing principles to your speech.
  • Think of one technology or application that you perceive has transformed your world. Choose two organizing principles and create two sample outlines for speeches about your topic. Share and compare with classmates.

Ayres, J., & Miller, J. (1994). Effective public speaking (4th ed., p 274). Madison, WI: Brown & Benchmark.

Maslow, A. (1970). Motivation and personality (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Harper & Row.

Shutz, W. (1966). The interpersonal underworld . Palo Alto, CA: Science and Behavior Books.

Business Communication for Success Copyright © 2015 by University of Minnesota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License , except where otherwise noted.

Oral Communication in Context Module: Principles of Speech Writing

This Self-Learning Module (SLM) is prepared so that you, our dear learners, can continue your studies and learn while at home. Activities, questions, directions, exercises, and discussions are carefully stated for you to understand each lesson.

Each SLM is composed of different parts. Each part shall guide you step-by-step as you discover and understand the lesson prepared for you.

Pre-tests are provided to measure your prior knowledge on lessons in each SLM. This will tell you if you need to proceed on completing this module or if you need to ask your facilitator or your teacher’s assistance for better understanding of the lesson.

In the previous lesson, speech was classified according to purpose: the expository or the informative speech, the persuasive speech and the entertainment speech. The manner of delivery was also discussed such as: reading or speaking from the manuscript, memorized speech, impromptu speech and extemporaneous speech. Knowing all these will lead you to be able to learn the basics of preparing a speech. But what makes the best speech. How do we deliver the speech we prepared effectively? All our questions will be answered by understanding by heart the principles of speech writing.

After going through this module, you are expected to:

1. identify the principles, techniques and process in writing;

2. set clear objectives in writing speech;

3. use the principles of effective speech writing in developing one’s speech.

Oral Communication in Context Quarter 2 Self-Learning Module: Principles of Speech Writing

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  1. Principle of Effective Speech Writing: Grammatical Correctness || SHS Oral Com || Quarter 2/4 Week 5

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  1. Oral Com Q2 Module 3 1

    Lesson 1: Principles of Effective Speech Writing Lesson 2: Principles of Speech Delivery. After going through this module, you are expected to: discuss the principles of effective speech writing; analyze the importance of Audience Profile, Logical Organization, Duration, Word Choice and Grammatical correctness) in writing a speech;

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  3. ETULAY ORAL COMMUNICATION Q2 WEEK 3: Principles of Effective Speech

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    Learning Competencies: Uses principles of effective speech writing focusing on the audience. Attachment: Discuss demography, situation, and psychology. • Demography has to be known to determine the interest of the audience. It will also affect the language style and formality of the speech.

  6. Oral-Communications Q2 Module-3

    In this module you will be able to: Use principles of effective speech writing focusing on: • Audience profile • Logical organization • Duration • Word choice • Grammatical correctness and • Articulation • Modulation • Stage Presence • Facial Expressions, Gestures and Movements • Rapport with the audience Specifically, you ...

  7. USES PRINCIPLES OF EFFECTIVE SPEECH WRITING

    USES PRINCIPLES OF EFFECTIVE SPEECH WRITING FOCUSING On: Quantity in Speech Rate Audience Profile Effective Word Choice Analysis involves identifying audience and adapting a speech to their interest, level of understanding, attitudes and beliefs. This is the length of time that

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    Uses principles of effective speech writing focusing on o Audience profile o Logical organization ... EN11/12OC-IIcj-25.5 4. Uses principles of effective speech delivery focusing on o Articulation o Modulation o Stage Presence o Facial Expressions, Gestures and Movements o Rapport with the audience EN11/12OC-IIcj-26 EN11/12OC-IIcj-26.1 EN11 ...

  9. Speechwriting 101: Writing an Effective Speech

    Remember that a speech is more like conversation than formal writing. Its phrasing is loose - but without the extremes of slang, the incomplete thoughts, the interruptions that flavor everyday speech. Give it rhythm. A good speech has pacing. Vary the sentence structure. Use short sentences. Use occasional long ones to keep the audience alert.

  10. PDF Oral Communication in Context

    writing a speech. 3. Using the principles of effective speech writing we would be able to focus the audience profile, the logical organization, the duration and word choice and even the grammatical correctness. 4. The Principles also include: choosing the topic, analyzing the audience,

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    Using Principles of Effective Speech Writing Focusing on Audience Profile and Logical Organization. View Download. Learning Material | PDF. Published on 2023 January 19th. Description. This module will help you in using the principles of effective speech writing focusing on audience analysis and logical organization patterns. Objective.

  12. Oral Com

    Uses principles of effective speech writing focusing on: Audience profile Logical organization Duration Word choice Grammatical correctness and Articulation Modulation Stage Presence Facial Expressions, Gestures and Movements Rapport with the audience D. Enabling Competencies (If available, write the attached enabling competencies)

  13. OCC11 Q2 Mod7 Principles-of-Speech-Writing Version 3

    Purpose - to entertain my audience. Speech writing process. Your output. Audience Profile. Purpose. Topic. Pattern to use. Outline. Self-Check! Great job! You have completed Lesson 1 successfully! Before going to the next lesson, choose the icon that best shows your learning experience. Write the description of the icon in your notebook.

  14. 12.5 Organizing Principles for Your Speech

    A train uses a heat source to heat water, create stream, and turn a turbine, which moves a lever that causes a wheel to move on a track. 9. Ascending and Descending: Structuring your speech by ascending or descending order involves focusing on quantity and quality. One good story (quality) leads to the larger picture, or the reverse.

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  16. PRINCIPLES OF EFFECTIVE SPEECH WRITING Flashcards

    After writing the body of your speech following the methods of organization, the last that you need to work on is how to end it. Duration The time and length of your speech. No matter how long your speech is, always divide it into five parts: an introduction, the body (paragraph 2, 3, 4) and a conclusion.

  17. 2nd Quarter Oral Communication Principles of Speech Writing

    The common way is to use the Rule of Three. Logical Organization. Your speech must follow a certain flow if you intent to communicate your ideas clearly and effectively. Categorical or topical. The most common for organizing a speech. The categories help the speaker organize the message in a consistent manner.

  18. Oral Communication in Context Module: Principles of Speech Writing

    All our questions will be answered by understanding by heart the principles of speech writing. After going through this module, you are expected to: 1. identify the principles, techniques and process in writing; 2. set clear objectives in writing speech; 3. use the principles of effective speech writing in developing one's speech.

  19. 35.4 Uses principles of effective speech writing focusing on facial

    Uses an organizational pattern in one of the types of effective informative speech outline using chronological pattern - focusing on facial expressions, gestures, and movements . Code: EN11/12OC-IIcj-26.4. Key Concepts / Understandings to be Developed. An Organizational Pattern of the Type of Informative Speech Delivery . Domain

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    Q2 - Module 1 - Principles of Effective Speech Writing - Free download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read online for free.