【我在头马的故事】Toastmaster演讲俱乐部

[Summary] [Toastmaster CC2] Org

2016-04-18  本文已影响640人  毛英勇

Project 2 - Organize Your Speech

Summary:

Organize - put ideas together in an orderly manner.

. Opening should catch the audience's attention.

. Body must support the idea we want to convey.

. Conclusion should reinforce our ideas and be memorable.

. Transitions between thoughts should be smooth.

Well-organized speech - benefits:

. Easier to understand.

. Easier to remember.

. More credible.

. More enjoyabl.

Select Topic

Decide what to talk about.

Example:

. Discussions we've had recently with friends or coworkers

. Magazine or newspaper articles that attracted your interest

. Our expertise on certain topics - real estate, writing, personal computers, etc.

. Everyday experiences - shopping, commuting, family relationships.

Be sure your topic is timely and relevant for your audience.

Make an Outline

Preparing our speech is to logically assemble our ideas into a sequence.

There are several different ways to organize,

 and the method we choose often depends on the topic we select and our objective.

.Chronological

 The topic is arranged by time.

.Spatial

 This type of speech follows a direction.

.Causal

 This type of speech shows cause/effect relationships.

.Comparative

 Compare and contrast different proposals or plans, and persuade the audience that one plan or proposal is better.

.Topical

 This speech splits the main topic into subtopics.

.Problem-solution

 Present a problem that needs to be solved and a solution to that problem.

Develop the Opening

The opening should immediately catch the audience's attention

      and tell the audience what we will be talking about.

-Examples of a good opening:

. A startling question or a challenging statement  

. An appropriate quotation, illustration or story

. A display of some object or picture

. An attention-getting generalization that ties in with your subject

-Avoid these weak openings:  

. An apologetic statement

. A story or joke that does not relate to your topic

. A commonplace observation delivered in a commonplace manner

. A long or slow-moving statement or story

. A trite question, such as "Did you ever stop to think...?"

Draft the Body

The body is the main part of your speech

and consists of the facts or ideas we want to present.

Then select the three best or most important facts or ideas.

Elaborate on each main point with subpoints.

A subpoint  clarifies, emphasizes or proves the idea or fact it supports.

Subpoints make the speech more interesting and help listeners  remember the main point or idea.

Supporting material can include:

. Statistics

. Testimony

. Examples

. Visual aids

. Facts

The Conclusion

The conclusion is our final opportunity to convey our message and main points in a manner that will help the audience  remember them.

It should reinforce our ideas and leave listeners with a lasting impression.

Sample Speech Outline

Following is an outline for a speech containing three main points:

A. Opening

1. Captures audience attention 2. Leads into speech topic

B. Body

1. Main point

a. Subpoint

b. Support material

2. Main point

a. Subpoint

b. Support material

3. Main point

a. Subpoint

b. Support material

C. Conclusion

1. Review or summary

2. Call to action or memorable statement

Pay Attention to Transitions

Audiences need help in moving smoothly from one topic to another.

Transitions usually are used as  we move:

. from the speech introduction to the body

. from a main point to a subpoint

. from a subpoint to support material

. from support material to another main point

. from the last support material to the conclusion

Transitions can be words, phrases, statements or questions

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