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Chp 16: Informative Speaking

Chp 16: Informative Speaking

BOOK: pgs. 241-253

PDF: pgs. 251-263

What you need to Know

  • To inform versus to persuade

  • Ways to organize your speech: spatial, chronological, cause-effect, problem-situation, topical ways to help audience understand speech concepts: repetition, provide rewards, show and tell, build on base knowledge and provide new insight, use humor, ask questions to see if they understand

Informative Speaking

  • Information speeches - speeches that teach something new

    • Inform: Make the audience aware of a phenomenon

    • Explain it to them to deepen their understanding

Information We Explain

  • Objects - tangible items

    • Artifacts, mementos, souvenirs, buildings, places, or even people

  • Processes - explains the steps needed to accomplish something; usually arranged chronologically

    • “How to” speech intended to teach the audience how to accomplish something

    • Explain processes specific to a particular industry

    • Explain how things happen in science and medicine

  • Events - focus on something that happened, is happening, or might happen at some point in the future.

    • Often organized chronologically

    • Allows the speaker to explain the event as it unfolds

    • Could be arranged topically, especially when many things are happening simultaneously

  • Concepts - explains an abstract idea instead of a concrete object

    • Presentations about theories, ideas, religions, economics, political ideology, or laws.

    • Challenging; they require the speaker to take something abstract and intangible and make it easy for the audience to understand by

      • Vivid descriptions, examples, or illustrations.

Patterns of Organization

  • Spatial: how parts are physically related to one another

  • Chronological: how events or processes occur in time

  • Cause-effect: how causes led to outcomes

  • Problem-solution: how solutions address problems

  • Topical: dividing by categories or subtopics

Difficult Concepts

  • According to Dr. Katherine Rowan, there are 3 reasons why informative speeches explain difficult concepts

    • Language or concept is difficult

    • Structures or processes are hard to envision

    • Ideas are difficult to believe

Difficult Language

  • Use elucidating explanations (an explanation that helps an audience understand the definition of a term and distinguish its essential characteristics from the associated characteristics that are only sometimes present in that which you are defining) with difficult vocabulary

  • Dr. Katherine Rowan explains that elucidating explanations should have four parts to process

  • Provide:

    • Common exemplar, or ideal example

    • The definition that explains the essentials characteristics of the concept

    • Several examples and non-examples

    • Opportunity to practice identifying examples and non-examples

Difficult to Picture

  • Two ways something might be difficult to imagine

    • Challenging to get an overall impression of the phenomenon

    • Challenging to see the parts, processes, and interrelations of the phenomenon

  • Use a quasi-scientific explanation (an explanation that helps the audience get an overall picture of a phenomenon and see relationships among the parts) in this case

    • Offer a graphic feature to help (e.g., diagram)

    • Provide clear explanation of how parts relate

Difficult to Believe

  • Something concepts are counterintuitive

  • Use a transformative explanation (explanations that help audience members transform their everyday ideas about how something works into a more scientifically accurate understanding of the phenomenon) in this case

    • Acknowledge lay theories of concept

    • Acknowledge why theories are plausible

    • Explain why their perspective is incorrect

    • Explain the new concept and why it’s effective

Strategies to Help Audience Understanding

  • Use repetition

    • Expose your audience to the same idea multiple times in multiple ways

    • The audience is more likely to remember the info

    • Aids your audience in understanding important complicated material within your speech

    • Provide more than one example

    • Find creative and different ways to express the same idea to help the audience achieve understanding.

    • The more you repeat something, the greater the chance the audience will pick up on it.

  • Provide rewards

    • Your audience will pay more attention to what you’re saying

    • Rewards can be:

      • Explicit (giving candy to members who can answer questions correctly) or

      • Implicit (telling the audience how they will benefit from the knowledge you’re sharing)

    • The reward lasts much longer for the audience.

    • Creating intrinsic rewards for listening to the speech assists the audience in investing time in paying attention to you.

    • When we invest time in something, it shows that we care about it.

  • Show and tell

    • Vital role in helping audiences understand the material

    • Uses visual and verbal organizational cues to help the audience identify the most important concepts and how they relate to each other.

    • Examples of visual organization cues:

      • Putting keywords for each main point on a PowerPoint slide

      • Showing important definitions or quotations while you’re talking about them

      • Showing your audience diagrams or images that will help them visualize how the concepts are related

      • Giving your audience a paper handout that will help them follow along during your speech

    • Use matrixes or other diagrams to help the audience understand the connections between the concepts.

    • Examples of verbal organizational cues:

      • Signposts

      • Reviews

      • Previews that help draw the audience’s attention to important concepts and

        • Help the audience understand how ideas are related

  • Build on what they already know

    • Connect the new information to something that the audience already knows.

    • Use an analogy or metaphor to show the similarities between something familiar and something new.

    • Connect your topic or info to something which they are already familiar with.

      • Helps the audience make the association themselves in terms they understand; info will be remembered.

  • Use humor

    • Capture and keep the audience’s attention.

    • Be careful; make sure that your humor enhances their attention rather than distracts from it.

    • Humor must help them focus on the content and not you.

    • The use of idioms and terms you expect the audience will know can be easily understood by the audience.

  • Check for understanding (periodically)

    • Ask your audience questions or provide examples

    • If not, adapt your speech by explaining the ideas in a slightly different way

    • Prepare a few different ways to explain the same point.

Delivering Information Dialogically

  • Provide multiple examples

  • Notice the audience’s nonverbal cues

  • Achieve understanding, not agreement

  • Ask clarifying questions

  • Maintain interest throughout your speech

  • Provide clear points and references

KP

Chp 16: Informative Speaking

Chp 16: Informative Speaking

BOOK: pgs. 241-253

PDF: pgs. 251-263

What you need to Know

  • To inform versus to persuade

  • Ways to organize your speech: spatial, chronological, cause-effect, problem-situation, topical ways to help audience understand speech concepts: repetition, provide rewards, show and tell, build on base knowledge and provide new insight, use humor, ask questions to see if they understand

Informative Speaking

  • Information speeches - speeches that teach something new

    • Inform: Make the audience aware of a phenomenon

    • Explain it to them to deepen their understanding

Information We Explain

  • Objects - tangible items

    • Artifacts, mementos, souvenirs, buildings, places, or even people

  • Processes - explains the steps needed to accomplish something; usually arranged chronologically

    • “How to” speech intended to teach the audience how to accomplish something

    • Explain processes specific to a particular industry

    • Explain how things happen in science and medicine

  • Events - focus on something that happened, is happening, or might happen at some point in the future.

    • Often organized chronologically

    • Allows the speaker to explain the event as it unfolds

    • Could be arranged topically, especially when many things are happening simultaneously

  • Concepts - explains an abstract idea instead of a concrete object

    • Presentations about theories, ideas, religions, economics, political ideology, or laws.

    • Challenging; they require the speaker to take something abstract and intangible and make it easy for the audience to understand by

      • Vivid descriptions, examples, or illustrations.

Patterns of Organization

  • Spatial: how parts are physically related to one another

  • Chronological: how events or processes occur in time

  • Cause-effect: how causes led to outcomes

  • Problem-solution: how solutions address problems

  • Topical: dividing by categories or subtopics

Difficult Concepts

  • According to Dr. Katherine Rowan, there are 3 reasons why informative speeches explain difficult concepts

    • Language or concept is difficult

    • Structures or processes are hard to envision

    • Ideas are difficult to believe

Difficult Language

  • Use elucidating explanations (an explanation that helps an audience understand the definition of a term and distinguish its essential characteristics from the associated characteristics that are only sometimes present in that which you are defining) with difficult vocabulary

  • Dr. Katherine Rowan explains that elucidating explanations should have four parts to process

  • Provide:

    • Common exemplar, or ideal example

    • The definition that explains the essentials characteristics of the concept

    • Several examples and non-examples

    • Opportunity to practice identifying examples and non-examples

Difficult to Picture

  • Two ways something might be difficult to imagine

    • Challenging to get an overall impression of the phenomenon

    • Challenging to see the parts, processes, and interrelations of the phenomenon

  • Use a quasi-scientific explanation (an explanation that helps the audience get an overall picture of a phenomenon and see relationships among the parts) in this case

    • Offer a graphic feature to help (e.g., diagram)

    • Provide clear explanation of how parts relate

Difficult to Believe

  • Something concepts are counterintuitive

  • Use a transformative explanation (explanations that help audience members transform their everyday ideas about how something works into a more scientifically accurate understanding of the phenomenon) in this case

    • Acknowledge lay theories of concept

    • Acknowledge why theories are plausible

    • Explain why their perspective is incorrect

    • Explain the new concept and why it’s effective

Strategies to Help Audience Understanding

  • Use repetition

    • Expose your audience to the same idea multiple times in multiple ways

    • The audience is more likely to remember the info

    • Aids your audience in understanding important complicated material within your speech

    • Provide more than one example

    • Find creative and different ways to express the same idea to help the audience achieve understanding.

    • The more you repeat something, the greater the chance the audience will pick up on it.

  • Provide rewards

    • Your audience will pay more attention to what you’re saying

    • Rewards can be:

      • Explicit (giving candy to members who can answer questions correctly) or

      • Implicit (telling the audience how they will benefit from the knowledge you’re sharing)

    • The reward lasts much longer for the audience.

    • Creating intrinsic rewards for listening to the speech assists the audience in investing time in paying attention to you.

    • When we invest time in something, it shows that we care about it.

  • Show and tell

    • Vital role in helping audiences understand the material

    • Uses visual and verbal organizational cues to help the audience identify the most important concepts and how they relate to each other.

    • Examples of visual organization cues:

      • Putting keywords for each main point on a PowerPoint slide

      • Showing important definitions or quotations while you’re talking about them

      • Showing your audience diagrams or images that will help them visualize how the concepts are related

      • Giving your audience a paper handout that will help them follow along during your speech

    • Use matrixes or other diagrams to help the audience understand the connections between the concepts.

    • Examples of verbal organizational cues:

      • Signposts

      • Reviews

      • Previews that help draw the audience’s attention to important concepts and

        • Help the audience understand how ideas are related

  • Build on what they already know

    • Connect the new information to something that the audience already knows.

    • Use an analogy or metaphor to show the similarities between something familiar and something new.

    • Connect your topic or info to something which they are already familiar with.

      • Helps the audience make the association themselves in terms they understand; info will be remembered.

  • Use humor

    • Capture and keep the audience’s attention.

    • Be careful; make sure that your humor enhances their attention rather than distracts from it.

    • Humor must help them focus on the content and not you.

    • The use of idioms and terms you expect the audience will know can be easily understood by the audience.

  • Check for understanding (periodically)

    • Ask your audience questions or provide examples

    • If not, adapt your speech by explaining the ideas in a slightly different way

    • Prepare a few different ways to explain the same point.

Delivering Information Dialogically

  • Provide multiple examples

  • Notice the audience’s nonverbal cues

  • Achieve understanding, not agreement

  • Ask clarifying questions

  • Maintain interest throughout your speech

  • Provide clear points and references