Stephanie Cortijo - Reflection #1

Chapter 1 – The Evolving Art of Public Speaking

Public speaking is more than reading; it’s about engaging your audience.

Roots in Ancient Greece and Rome (Aristotle, Cicero, Quintilian).

Four audience appeals: Logos (logic), Pathos (emotion), Ethos(credibility), Mythos (values).

Five canons of rhetoric: Invention, Arrangement, Style, Memory, Delivery.

Public speaking is a life skill → builds confidence, improves listening, credibility, and civic engagement.

Compared to conversation: both use logic and storytelling, but speeches are more formal and structured.

Ethics: honesty, crediting sources, respecting perspectives.


Chapter 2 – Building Your Confidence

Speech anxiety is normal and stems from temperament, role uncertainty, audience judgment, and evaluation pressure.

Confidence matters: makes communication clearer, boosts career opportunities, and strengthens adaptability.

Strategies to reduce anxiety: deep breathing, visualization, relabeling nervousness as energy, preparation, and practice.

Confidence is a vital life skill, not just for class.


Chapter 3 – Listening

Hearing = passive, Listening = active (understanding/responding).

Types of listening: ComprehensiveCriticalEmpathic.

Barriers: distractions, information overload, biases.

Active listening strategies: focus, take notes, ask questions, give feedback (body language).

Listening strengthens communication, arguments, and adaptation to audience.


Chapter 5 – Adapting to Your Audience

Audience = central to speech; without them, it’s just talking.

Audience analysis: demographics, psychographics, situation, expectations/needs.

Importance: increases understanding, trust, engagement, and impact.

Building credibility: competence, trustworthiness, enthusiasm, warmth.

Key: Tailor message to audience values, culture, and context.



Group 2 PowerPoint (Chapters 4, 6, 7, 8):



Chapter 4 – Types of Speeches & Purpose

Speech Types:

Informative (explain/describe)

Persuasive (influence beliefs/actions)

Special Occasion (celebrate/commemorate)

Choosing a Topic: Brainstorm personal interests, audience relevance, current events, available resources.

Specific Purpose = General purpose + topic + audience response.

Thesis: One clear sentence stating central idea & previewing main points.

Working Outline: Includes topic, purpose, thesis, and keywords; organizes and refines ideas.



Chapter 6 – Researching Your Speech

Research Plan: Identify what you know, what you need, and where to look.

Sources: Internet, libraries (books, journals, gov. publications), nonprint resources, interviews.

Search Skills: Use keywords, advanced search, beyond text.

Evaluating Sources: Check relevance, purpose, validity.

Plagiarism: Must credit sources orally or in writing. Use paraphrasing, note-taking strategies, and proper citations.



Chapter 7 – Supporting Materials

Narratives: Personal, cultural, institutional stories to engage emotions.

Examples: General, specific, hypothetical—make ideas relatable.

Definitions & Comparisons: Functional definitions, analogies, metaphors/similes create clarity & vivid imagery.

Testimony: Expert (credibility), Celebrity (attention), Lay (relatability).

Facts, Inferences, Opinions, Statistics: Build logic and support arguments.



Chapter 8 – Organizing the Speech

Organizational Patterns:

Topical – break into parts.

Narrative – emotional storytelling.

Cause-Effect – explain why and what resulted.

Problem-Solution – present issue + fix.

Monroe’s Motivated Sequence – 5 steps: Attention, Need, Satisfaction, Visualization, Action.

Outlines: Structure your ideas clearly and logically.



Overall Message:

To craft an effective speech, you must choose a clear purposeresearch thoroughlyuse strong supporting evidence (stories, examples, statistics, testimony), and organize ideas with patterns that engage and persuade your audience.




Group 3 PowerPoint (Chapters 9, 10, 11, 12):



Chapter 9 – Primacy & Recency Effects

Primacy Effect: People remember what they hear first best. Sets tone, builds connection, reduces nervousness.

Recency Effect: People remember what they hear last best. Leaves lasting impression, inspires action.

Key Point: Begin and end speeches strongly for maximum impact.



Chapter 10 – Language Fundamentals

Language = system of communication (spoken, written, signed).

Characteristics: Arbitrary (words = symbols), ambiguous (different meanings), active (changes over time).

Denotative vs. Connotative meanings (dictionary vs. personal experience).

Slang: Too casual; avoid in speeches.

Jargon: Technical language; use carefully.

Idioms: Figurative phrases (e.g., “piece of cake”).

Euphemisms: Softer words for harsh ideas.

Gender differences in interpretation (men vs. women interpret phrases differently).

Summary: Effective speakers balance clarity and creativity while respecting cultural/language differences.



Chapter 11 – Presentation Media & Visual Design

Purpose: Enhances engagement, clarity, retention.

Media Types: Slides, videos, flip charts, document cameras.

Design Principles:

Keep visuals simple & clear.

Highlight key ideas only.

Use visuals for things hard to explain.

Use readable fonts, minimal text (4–6 points).

Limit animations; use contrast for readability.

Best Practices: Prepare equipment, face audience (not screen), don’t read slides, have a backup plan.



Chapter 12 – Delivering Your Speech

Delivery Methods:

Manuscript (word-for-word).

Memorized (polished, risky).

Impromptu (spontaneous).

Extemporaneous (best) – prepared but conversational.

Influencing Factors: Audience expectations, environment, personal style, culture.

Voice Management: Clear articulation, varied pitch, volume, pauses for effect.

Body Language: Dress well, stand tall, use natural gestures, facial expressions, eye contact.

Managing Audience: Adjust to reactions, handle distractions calmly, maintain engagement.

Speaking Outline: Short, keyword-based, organized, with clear transitions.

Practice: Rehearse multiple times, time yourself, simulate delivery with gestures/voice.

Key Takeaway: Delivery = preparation + practice + adaptability.



✅ Overall Message:

Strong speeches begin and end powerfully (primacy & recency), use clear and purposeful language, integrate effective visuals, and rely on confident delivery with voice, body, and audience engagement.


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