Oral Comm LM Shs
Oral Comm LM Shs
Oral Comm LM Shs
Context
For Senior High School
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2016.
C&E
Publishing, Inc.
ISBN 978-971-98-0449-9
Table of
Contents
Preface iv
Acknowledgements v
iv
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Acknowledgements
We are very grateful to the management, staff, and editors of C&E Publishing, Inc. This book
could not have been prepared or published without their support.
We are also very thankful to our family, colleagues, students, and friends— particularly Dr. Jessie
Barrot, Sean Tabiola, Mari Karen Gabinete, Elaine Masangya, Maria Cequena, Aldrin Salipande, and
Joan Agdeppa— for their love, inspiration, and wisdom. We would also like to thank those who
offered their time and expertise in the making of this book.
Above all, we are indebted to God Almighty!
Philippe John F.
Sipacio Anne Richie
G. Balgos
Authors
v
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2016.
All rights reserved. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means -
electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2016.
ature and Elements of Communicatio
Unit
This unit lays out the foundational knowledge for studying oral communication.
It features essential information including the definition and nature of communication and
the rudiments of communicating across cultures.
Fundamentals of
1 Communication
2 Intercultural
Communication
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2016.
Lesson 1
Fundamentals of
Communication
By the end of the lesson, you will have been able to
⌂ explain the nature and process of communication;
⌂ differentiate various models of communication;
⌂ discuss functions of communication;
⌂ distinguish the unique features of one communication process from the other;
⌂ practice effective verbal and nonverbal communication during social interactions;
⌂ explain why there is a breakdown of communication;
⌂ apply strategies in overcoming communication breakdowns;
⌂ practice effective communication skills;
⌂ evaluate the effectiveness of an oral communication;
⌂ practice learning and thinking skills, life skills, and ICT literacy; and
⌂ reflect on your learning on the fundamentals of communication.
Let’s Warm Up
Debriefing Questions
1. Which groups effectively communicated their message? Give reasons why the presentation was
effective.
2. Is effective communication important? Why? Why not?
2
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Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
3
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Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I
Stand up. Think of one fact that you know about communication and share it with
everyone. Once you have shared something, you can sit down and listen to what the rest
of the class has to share.
Key Takeaways
Communication is a process of sharing and conveying messages or information from one person
to another within and across channels, contexts, media, and cultures (McCornack, 2014). There is
a wide variety of contexts and situations in which communication can be manifested; it can be a face-
to-face interaction, a phone conversation, a group discussion, a meeting or interview, a letter
correspondence, a class recitation, and many others.
Nature of Communication
1. Communication is a process.
2. Communication occurs between two or more people (the speaker and the receiver).
3. Communication can be expressed through written or spoken words, actions (nonverbal), or both
spoken words and nonverbal actions at the same time.
Elements of Communication
Communication is divided into elements which help us better understand its mechanics or
process. These elements are the following:
1. Speaker – the source of information or message
2. Message – the information, ideas, or thoughts conveyed by the speaker in words or in actions
3. Encoding – the process of converting the message into words, actions, or other forms that
the speaker understands
4. Channel – the medium or the means, such as personal or non-personal, verbal or
nonverbal, in which the encoded message is conveyed
5. Decoding – the process of interpreting the encoded message of the speaker by the receiver
6. Receiver – the recipient of the message, or someone who decodes the message
7. Feedback – the reactions, responses, or information provided by the receiver
8. Context – the environment where communication takes place
9. Barrier – the factors that affect the flow of communication
Process of Communication Example
The speaker generates an idea. Daphne loves Rico, her suitor, as a friend.
The speaker encodes an idea or converts She thinks of how to tell him using their
the idea into words or actions. native language.
The speaker transmits or sends out a She tells him, “Rico, mahal kita bilang
message. kaibigan.”
The receiver gets the message. Rico hears what Daphne says.
The receiver decodes or interprets the He tries to analyze what she means based
message based on the context. on the content and their relationship,
and he is heartbroken.
Models of Communication
1. Shannon-Weaver Model
Known as the mother of all communication models, the Shannon-Weaver model (1949) depicts
communication as a linear or one-way process consisting of five elements: a source (producer
of message); a transmitter (encoder of message into signals); a channel (signals adapted for
transmission); a receiver (decoder of message from the signal); and a destination.
This model, however, has been criticized for missing one essential element in the
communication process: feedback. Without feedback, the speaker will not know whether the
receiver understands the message or not.
Information
Source Transmitter Receiver Destination
Channel
Signal Received
Signal
Message Message
Noise Source
Feedback Feedback
(Sends and receives) (Sends and receives)
Responds Decodes Responds Decodes
Message
ChannelsChannels
Exercise II (Group)
Work with your group mates in the Let’s Warm Up activity. As a group, do the following:
Noise
Feedback
Fig 3. Schramm Model
Functions of Communication
Basically, there are five functions of communication. These are control, social interaction,
motivation, emotional expression, and information dissemination.
1. Control – Communication functions to control behavior.
2. Social Interaction – Communication allows individuals to interact with others.
3. Motivation – Communication motivates or encourages people to live better.
4. Emotional expression – Communication facilitates people’s expression of their feelings and
emotions.
5. Information dissemination – Communication functions to convey information.
Exercise III
Identify the function of communication in each of the following situations. Write your
answers on the space provided.
Barriers to Communication
There are instances when miscommunication and misunderstanding occur because of certain
barriers. To become an effective communicator, you should recognize these barriers that hinder
the communication process. This will enable you to control the situation, reset conditions, and
start anew. The table below presents some barriers to effective communication with corresponding
solutions.
Barrier Example Solution
Emotional You are having a bad day or you Recognize these kinds of emotions, and politely ask the
barriers feel frustrated. other person to give you a moment so you can relax or calm
yourself.
You sit in a meeting or class Recognize this kind of attitude, reset, and reflect on how you
where you think the speaker is can be interested in what the speaker is pointing out.
boring.
Use of jargon You are a scientist discussing a Jargon refers to the set of specialized vocabulary in a
certain weather phenomenon certain field. To avoid communication breakdown due to
with your neighbor who does not lack of clarity, adjust your language; use layman’s terms or
know much about the topic. simple words.
Lack of You are asked to share something Develop self-confidence by joining organizations where you
confidence about your day or weekend, but can share and develop your interests. Look for
you are hesitant because you are opportunities in your school or community that will help
shy. you find your strengths and improve your abilities.
Noisy You are having a conversation Recognize that noise is a common barrier. Make some
environment with some friends when a song adjustments by asking someone to minimize the volume
was played loudly. or by looking for a quiet area where you can resume the
conversation.
Note that these are only some of the barriers; many others may arise out of context, language,
physical restrictions, and the like.
Exercise IV (Class)
As a class, complete the semantic web below with a word or group of words relevant to
communication. You can assign a representative to gather and/or consolidate the
responses of the class.
1.
1.
2.
2.
Barriers Definition 3.
3.
1.
2.
3.
Features Communication Proce s
4.
5.
1.
2.
3. 1.
4. 2.
5. Models Ele ents
6. 3.
7. 4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Shannon-Weaver 9.
Transaction Model Model
Let’s Practice
I. Group Activity. Your teacher will divide the class into three groups. This activity follows the
format of a charades game, and the objective is to guess unknown words in the shortest time
possible.
Your teacher will assign a category for each group. Assign a timekeeper in your group
and prepare ten pieces of one-fourth-sized paper and a small empty box or pencil case. Think
of words or phrases related to your category and write each word in a piece o f paper. Fold
each piece to hide the word.
Remember not to choose words that are very difficult to guess. Follow the guidelines below.
• At least two members of the group must be familiar with the word’s meaning.
• A word should only be composed of a maximum of eight letters.
• Proper names are not allowed, but they can be used along with other words.
• Foreign words and technical terms are not allowed.
The score for each group is the total time that the group accumulated for all the rounds. The
group with the shortest time wins.
II. Group Activity.With the same group, perform a five-minute presentation of your favorite scene
from an English movie, TV series, or musical or non-musical stage play. The chosen scene
should show how one or more barriers to communication lead to miscommunication. You
have 20 minutes to plan and organize.
III. Group Activity. With your group mates, discuss the following:
• Was there a lack of communication or miscommunication within your group when you
organized and performed your tasks? What are these?
• Why do you think this happened?
• What are the barriers to communication that occurred?
• What strategies did you use to avoid the barriers and miscommunication?
Make sure that each member gives his/her answer. Overall, you have ten minutes to exchange
ideas. Afterwards, assign one person, preferably the shyest member in your group, to share with
the class the highlights or the most important points of the discussion.
IV. Individual Activity. Your teacher will randomly ask you a question. Once your turn comes,
you have to stand in front and answer your teacher’s question, which may range from life
goals to personal favorites.
• After you answer, your teacher will give a follow-up question which you have to answer as
well.
• Then, he/she will assign two members of the class to respond to your answers.
V. Individual Activity.
Imagine that you are addressing a group of parents and teachers in an
assembly on understanding your generation known as the “Millennial Generation.”
• Prepare a two-minute speech that communicates your ideas about the topic.
• Your speech should highlight who the millennials are and how they are different from other
generations.
• Before the speech deliveries, find a partner.
• Evaluate each other’s speech deliveries using the rubrics on the next page.
• Write the strong and weak points of the presentation in the succeeding table.
Rubric for Evaluating Speech Presentations
VGE GE SE LE N
Criteria
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
TOTAL
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 33–40; GE – 25–32; SE – 17–24; LE – 9–16; N – 8
Comments
The good points of the presentation are… The areas that need to be improved are…
Reinforcement Activity
Observe two of your classes other than English. Find out the nature, process, elements,
and models of communication exemplified in each class.
Using a maximum of 500 words, write a report about your observations. Use the
following format: font 12, Times New Roman, 1.5 spacing.
E-link
Hone your communication skills by checking the exercises found on the websites
below. Communication Exercises
Q http://blog.trainerswarehouse.com/communication-and-listening-exercises/
Exercises on Barriers to Effective Communication
Q http://www.livestrong.com/article/97647-exercises-barriers-effective-communication/
Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart
below.
I thought…
What were your thoughts or ideas about the fundamentals of communication prior to the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
What new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
Lesson 2
Intercultural
Communication
By the end of the lesson, you will have been able to
⌂ define intercultural communication;
⌂ demonstrate effective intercultural communication skills in a speech situation;
⌂ develop appreciation for different cultural perspectives;
⌂ practice effective intercultural communication;
⌂ apply learning and thinking skills, life skills, and ICT literacy in understanding intercultural
communication;
⌂ communicate sensitively, taking into consideration a listener’s gender, religion, beliefs, and
traditions; and
⌂ reflect on your learning about intercultural communication.
Let’s Warm Up
15
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c. Nonverbal cues (Do they think shaking hands is distasteful?)
d. Values (What do they find offensive? What positive trait are they known for?)
4. Based on these general traits, create a list of 5 Dos and 5 Don’ts which your fictional
citizens adhere to when they attend a casual dinner party with friends. You have five
minutes to come up with the rules and memorize them.
5. Then, read the following scenario.
You are a citizen of your fictional country, and you are attending a dinner party with other
nationalities. Your goal is to mingle with and introduce yourself and your fictional country to
others.
6. The “party” will be hosted by your teacher. He/she will give the signal for the “party” to start.
7. Once the “party” starts, each of you has to roam around and talk with people from
other groups. Keep in mind the following rules.
a. Refrain from speaking with your group mates.
b. Do not talk about the rules which your group created.
8. The “party” will last for 5 minutes.
9. Afterwards, confer with your group mates and discuss the following:
a. Was there a difference between your group’s behavior and others’?
b. How did you handle the differences between your behaviors?
Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
Usually Sometimes Seldom Never
1. I interact, negotiate, and create meaning with
others while taking into consideration varied
cultural backgrounds.
2. I do not think that my own culture is better than
others’.
3. I understand that communication can be
influenced by culture, gender, age, social status,
and religion.
4. I demonstrate sensitivity when I communicate
with others.
5. I communicate to share information across
cultures.
16
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Usually Sometimes Seldom Never
7. I communicate to understand different cultures
and social groups.
TOTAL
You will be provided with some source-based materials like photographs, newspaper clippings,
and letters. Using these pieces of information, work together and come up with some interesting
data about your country. Write questions (how, what, why, where, when and who) and provide
corresponding answers.
Example:
China
Question:When is the best time to visit your country?
Answer:
France
Question:What is the history behind the Eiffel Tower?
Answer:
Japan
Question:How did you earn the title “The Land of the Rising Sun?”
Answer:
Mexico
Question:How would you describe your cuisine?
Answer:
Philippines
Question:Why are you called the “Pearl of the Orient Seas?”
Answer:
Come up with as many questions and answers as you can. After brainstorming, pretend that
you are in an international conference for peace and that you will field a foreign correspondent
who will answer questions from the audience about your assigned country.
Choose one of your members to act as the foreign correspondent. The remaining members will
act as the audience from other nationalities who will ask the questions you listed. Present this in a
three-minute skit.
Exercise Sheet
On the sheet provided, list the questions and answers that will provide pieces of information about the country assigned to your group.
Country:
Question 1:
Answer:
Question 2:
Answer:
Question 3:
Answer:
Question 4:
Answer:
Question 5:
Answer:
Question 6:
Answer:
Question 7:
Answer:
Question 8:
Answer:
Question 9:
Answer:
Question 10:
Answer:
Key Takeaways
19
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2016.
Both interpretations show that intercultural communication takes place when people
draw from their cultural identity to understand values, prejudices, language, attitudes, and
relationships (Gudykunst & Kim, 2003). Moreover, this facet of communication can also be seen
as a bargained understanding of human experiences across diverse societies. Simply put,
intercultural communication is the sending and receiving of messages across languages and cultures.
Sometimes, intercultural communication can flow smoothly and become very interesting for a
cross-cultural group. However, things may not go as planned when communication is disrupted by
cultural collisions.
When you speak, your speech is continuously accompanied by gestures, facial expressions,
and other body movements that add to what you are saying in different ways. For example,
nodding means “yes” in the Indian subcontinent, Iran, most of Europe, Latin America, and North
America. However, in Greece, Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, Turkey, Macedonia, Bulgaria, and
Albania, nodding indicates disagreement. Moreover, in the case of Japanese culture, silence as a
form of communication is more integrated in their customs than in Western languages. It is
therefore important for you to acknowledge and understand the many communication patterns
present in other cultures.
The Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity (DMIS) offers a structure that explores
how people experience cultural differences. According to Bennett and Bennett (2004), it has six
stages. These are the following:
Stage 1: Denial. The individual does not recognize cultural differences.
Stage 2: Defense. The individual starts to recognize cultural differences and is intimidated by
them, resulting in either a superior view on own culture or an unjustified high regard for the
new one.
Stage 3: Minimization. Although individuals see cultural differences, they bank more on the
universality of ideas rather than on cultural differences.
20
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An individual in the acceptance stage might be heard saying:
“These people and I have different values and experiences, and I think we can learn from one
another.”
21
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Stage 5: Adaptation. The individual is very open to world views when accepting new perspectives.
Stage 6: Integration. Individuals start to go beyond their own cultures and see themselves
and their actions based on multifarious cultural viewpoints.
World Bank (2010) identifies the following traits that define a competent intercultural
communicator.
1. flexibility and the ability to tolerate high levels of uncertainty
2. reflectiveness or mindfulness
3. open-mindedness
4. sensitivity
5. adaptability
6. ability to engage in divergent thinking (or thinking creatively) and systems-level thinking (or
thinking how each one in a system or organization influences each other)
7. politeness
Note that in addition to culture, other elements such as gender, age, social status, and religion
must also be taken into consideration when communicating with others. Refrain from showing
bias when talking to someone by following the tips below.
1. Avoid stereotypes, i.e., generalizations about a certain group.
2. Challenge gender norms; avoid using “he” and “man” to refer to a general group of people.
To remedy this, you may use plural pronouns or rewrite a sentence to avoid using pronouns.
The use of his/her is also acceptable.
3. Do not talk down on younger people and the elderly.
4. Be sensitive to the religious practices of others.
5. Be polite at all times; do not belittle people you perceive to be on a lower social class than
you.
Exercise II (Individual-Pair)
Read each statement. If it displays bias or insensitivity, write the group/element
being misrepresented (gender, social status, age, religion, culture). If not, write “OK.”
Once done, compare and discuss your answers with a partner.
I. Group Activity. Work with your group mates in Let’s Warm Up.
A. Look at the following photo which compares an advertisement in Sweden and in
Saudi Arabia.
II. Group Activity. With your group mates from the previous exercise, do the following:
A. 1. Imagine yourselves to be a group of individuals of different nationalities.
2. Think of a business you are interested to put up.
3. Think of a creative name for your business.
4. On the lines below, write what the business is about, who your prospective clients are,
and why you put up such business.
5. Do these in 10 minutes.
B. 1. Brainstorm for a logo for your business that will show an integration of the cultures of
the countries you are from.
2. Draw it on the space below.
3. Do these in 10 minutes.
III. Group Activity. Do the following:
a. Work with your group mates. Assign a number to each member.
b. Individually, prepare a two-minute speech about this quote taken from Understanding
Cultural Differences by Edward Hall and Mildred Hall: “The essence of effective cross-cultural
communication has more to do with releasing the right responses than with sending the ‘right’
message.”
c. Highlight your speech with your answer to the following question: Why is “releasing the right
responses” more important than “sending the right message” in intercultural communication?
d. Prepare your speech in five minutes.
e. Based on the sequence of your number, deliver your two-minute speech in your group.
f. Everyone in the group should present.
Reinforcement Activity
Choose an international company which interests you. Visit their website. If a company
has multiple websites, visit at least two of them.
Using a minimum of 500 words, write an essay discussing at least two (2) strategies
employed by the company to ensure that the right messages on their products and
services are sent effectively across cultures worldwide.
Use the following format: computerized, font 12, Times New Roman, 1.5 spacing.
E-link
Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart
below.
I thought…
What were your thoughts or ideas about intercultural communication prior to the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
What new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
27
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2016.
I
Unit
Strategies in Various
Speech Situations
This unit focuses on the various ways and situations in which people communicate.
It discusses how a communicator’s style of speaking changes according to the context and
how statements elicit various responses from listeners.
Types of
2 Types of
Speech Act
3 Types of
Communicative Strategy
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2016.
Lesson 1
Types of
Speech Context and Style
By the end of the lesson, you will have been able to
⌂ differentiate types of speech contexts;
⌂ explain the importance of effective communication skills;
⌂ practice effective interpersonal skills and intrapersonal skills;
⌂ identify strategies in effective interpersonal skills and intrapersonal skills;
⌂ exhibit appropriate verbal and nonverbal behavior in a given speech context;
⌂ apply learning and thinking skills, life skills, and ICT literacy in understanding the types of
speech contexts; and
⌂ reflect on your learning on the types of speech contexts.
Let’s Warm Up
29
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
30
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Group)
With the same group, discuss in three minutes what information can be contained in
each of the following types of communication. Fill in each box with the information
needed.
1. Intrapersonal – This refers to communication that centers on one person where the speaker acts
both as the sender and the receiver of message. “The message is made up of your thoughts and
feelings. The channel is your brain, which processes what you are thinking and feeling. There
is feedback in the sense that as you talk to yourself, you discard certain ideas and replace them
with others.” (Hybels & Weaver, 2012, p 16)
Examples:
• You spent the night thinking and analyzing why a student from the other class talked to you
on the way home and you decided it probably meant nothing.
• You felt happy while thinking about how your teacher appreciated you for submitting your
project before the due date and you reflected on why this was so.
2. Interpersonal – This refers to communication between and among people and establishes
personal relationship between and among them. Solomon and Theiss (2013) state that “the
inter part of the word highlights how interpersonal communication connects people… when
you engage in interpersonal communication, you and another person become linked
together… The personal part means that your unique qualities as a person matter during
interpersonal communication…” (p. 5)
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
Types of Speech Style
The context dictates and affects the way people communicate, which results in various speech
styles. According to Joos (1968), there are five speech styles. These are (1) intimate, (2) casual,
(3) consultative, (4) formal, and (5) frozen. Each style dictates what appropriate language or
vocabulary should be used or observed.
1. Intimate – This style is private, which occurs between or among close family members or
individuals. The language used in this style may not be shared in public.
2. Casual – This style is common among peers and friends. Jargon, slang, or the vernacular
language are used.
3. Consultative – This style is the standard one. Professional or mutually acceptable language
is a must in this style. Examples of situations are communication between teachers and
students, employers and employees, doctor and patient, judge and lawyer, or President and
his/her constituents.
4. Formal – This style is used in formal settings. Unlike the consultative style, this is one-way.
Examples are sermons by priests and ministers, State of the Nation Address of the President,
formal speeches, or pronouncements by judges.
5. Frozen – This style is “frozen” in time and remains unchanged. It mostly occurs in
ceremonies. Common examples are the Preamble to the Constitution, Lord’s Prayer, and
Allegiance to country or flag.
I. Group Activity. Work with your group mates from Let’s Warm Up. Your teacher will pass around
a box with strips of paper in it. Each strip of paper has a question. Each of you will pick a strip
and share your answer with the group. There are no wrong answers, but you have very little
time to think about your answer. Speaking from the heart will help you a lot.
II. Group Activity. With the same group, write a short original play which employs the various
speech contexts and speech styles. Present it in class.
IV. Group Activity. Using one of the topics you chose, create a poster or a collage that will
represent your ideas on the topic. Employ as many colors, symbols, and signs as you can to
make your collage or poster more meaningful. Be ready to explain your output. All members
of the group will present in class.
V. Group Activity. Form four to six groups. Each group will be working with another group. All
groups will write a story in formal style for five minutes. This can be a simple story from a
fairy tale or any book, movie, or television show. Then, exchange stories with another group.
Translate the story into casual style. You have five minutes to recreate the story. After completing
the stories, assign a volunteer who will share the story’s casual version.
VI. Group Activity. Prepare and plan for a small group discussion. Use the following as your guide.
1. Form a group with four to five members.
2. Imagine that you are officers of a school organization conducting a meeting to address a
specific concern. Below are some of the suggested topics which you can discuss.
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 61–75; GE – 46–60; SE – 31–45; LE – 16–30; N – 15
Reinforcement Activity
1. Planning
a. Determine the purpose of the interview.
b. State the major points clearly.
c. Choose the right person to be interviewed.
d. Consider the date, time, and place of the interview.
e. Outline the interview.
f. Prepare list of questions related to your interview.
2. Interview Stage
a. Bear in mind the purpose of the interview.
b. Relax and be polite, patient, and considerate.
c. Show courtesy and respect to your interviewee. Do not give your opinions.
d. Thank your interviewee after the interview.
E-link
Hone your knowledge in identifying types of speech contexts by looking into the
exercises found on the websites below.
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart below.
I thought…
ghts or ideas about the types of speech contexts and styles prior to the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
What new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
Lesson 2
Types of
Speech Act
By the end of the lesson, you will have been able to
⌂ define speech acts;
⌂ distinguish types of speech act;
⌂ recognize that communicative competence requires understanding of speech acts;
⌂ demonstrate effective use of communicative strategy in a variety of speech situations;
⌂ apply learning and thinking skills, life skills, and ICT literacy in understanding the types of
speech acts; and
⌂ reflect on your learning on the types of speech acts.
Let’s Warm Up
With a partner, take the quiz below and check if you can discern the meaning behind
the utterance. You have five minutes to answer the exercise. Encircle the letter of your
answer.
1. Consider the phrase: “I now declare Martial Law.” Who among the following can say this
phrase and make martial law actually happen?
a. President of the country
b. My pregnant neighbor
c. A retired veterinarian
d. A famous rock star
2. What do you think does the speaker mean when he/she says, “Can you open the door?”
a. The speaker wants to know if I have the ability to open the door.
b. The speaker is requesting me to open the door.
c. The speaker does not make sense.
d. The speaker is asking me a question.
41
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3. You and your friend who has a fever enter your room. She shivers and tells you, “It’s cold in
here!” How would you interpret what she said?
a. She feels cold.
b. She wants me to increase the temperature in the room.
c. She does not feel well because of the cold.
d. She is complimenting the temperature in my room.
4. Based on the scenario in item number 3, what would your next action be?
a. I will thank my friend.
b. I will agree with her and say that the room is cold.
c. I will increase the temperature to decrease the coldness.
d. I will ignore my friend.
5. In which of the following statements is the speaker making a commitment?
a. “I checked her Facebook profile yesterday.”
b. “I’m in love and I’m happy!”
c. “I promise to love you for better or for worse.”
d. “I think following my suggestion will get us a high grade.”
Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
42
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Usually Sometimes Seldom Never
8. I try to decode speech acts based on the
context of the situation.
9. I understand the intended meaning of indirect
speech acts.
10. I can tell when a speech act is being used
during communication.
TOTAL
Key Takeaways
43
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2016.
Three Types of Speech Act
According to J. L. Austin (1962), a philosopher of language and the developer of the Speech Act
Theory, there are three types of acts in every utterance, given the right circumstances or context.
These are:
1. Locutionary act is the actual act of uttering.
By uttering the locution “Please do the dishes,” the speaker requests the
addressee to wash the dishes.
3. Perlocutionary act is the resulting act of what is said. This effect is based on the particular
context in which the speech act was mentioned.
“Please do the dishes” would lead to the addressee washing the dishes.
There are also indirect speech acts which occur when there is no direct connection between the
form of the utterance and the intended meaning. They are different in force (i.e., intention) from
the inferred speech act.
For example, read the following
Inferred speech act: Do you have the ability to hand over the rice?
Indirect speech act: Please pass the rice.
So while the utterance literally asks the addressee if he or she has the ability to hand a plate of
rice, it actually indirectly requests the addressee to pass the rice to the speaker.
Performatives
Austin also introduced the concept of performative utterances: statements which enable the
speaker to perform something just by stating it. In this manner, verbs that execute the speech act
that they intend to effect are called performatives. A performative utterance said by the right person
under the right circumstances results in a change in the world. Note that certain conditions have to
be met when making a performative utterance.
For example, the phrase “I now pronounce you
husband and wife,” when uttered by an authorized
person such as a judge will have the actual effect of
binding a couple in marriage. However, if the same
statement is uttered to the same couple in the same
place by someone who is not authorized to marry
them—as in the case of the accompanying picture, a
robot—then there is no effect whatsoever because a
condition was not met.
44
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Searle’s Classifications of Speech Act
As a response to Austin’s Speech Act Theory, John Searle (1976), a professor from the University
of California, Berkeley, classified illocutionary acts into five distinct categories.
1. Assertive – a type of illocutionary act in which the speaker expresses belief about the truth of
a proposition. Some examples of an assertive act are suggesting, putting forward, swearing,
boasting, and concluding.
Example:
No one makes better pancakes than I do.
2. Directive – a type of illocutionary act in which the speaker tries to make the addressee
perform an action. Some examples of a directive act are asking, ordering, requesting,
inviting, advising, and begging.
Example:
Please close the door.
3. Commissive – a type of illocutionary act which commits the speaker to doing something in
the future. Examples of a commissive act are promising, planning, vowing, and betting.
Example:
From now on, I will participate in our group activity.
4. Expressive – a type of illocutionary act in which the speaker expresses his/her feelings or
emotional reactions. Some examples of an expressive act are thanking, apologizing,
welcoming, and deploring.
Example:
I am so sorry for not helping out in our group projects and letting you do all the work.
5. Declaration – a type of illocutionary act which brings a change in the external situation.
Simply put, declarations bring into existence or cause the state of affairs which they refer
to. Some examples of declarations are blessing, firing, baptizing, bidding, passing a
sentence, and excommunicating.
Example:
You are fired!
By saying that someone is fired, an employer causes or brings about the person’s
unemployment, thus changing his external situation.
Always keep in mind that speech acts include concrete life interactions that require the
appropriate use of language within a given culture. Communicative competence (i.e., the ability
to use linguistic knowledge to effectively communicate with others) is essential for a speaker to be
able to use and understand speech acts. Idioms and other nuances in a certain language might be
lost or misunderstood by someone who does not fully grasp the language yet.
Exercise II (Pair)
Work with your partner from the previous activity. Complete the following table with
information related to Searle’s Classification of Speech Acts.
Example:
Classification of
Specific Situation Example
Speech Act
Chris bought a new gadget, and he “I’m the only one in school who has
Assertive
shows it off to his friends. this new iPhone model.”
Your turn:
Classification of
Situation Example
Speech Act
Assertive
Directive
Commisive
Expressive
Declaration
Let’s Practice
I. Pair Activity. Work with your partner from the Let’s Work and Learn activity. Watch the
second video below. Pay attention to details like greetings, personal identification, and pre-
closing and closing signals.
Video 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2EwBB5McJo
Compare the greeting, pre-closing, and closing in Video 2 to those in Video 1. How are they
similar or different?
II. Group Activity. Group yourselves into five members each. Within 15 minutes, prepare a three-
to four-minute creative skit which shows at least five examples of Searle’s speech act
classifications.
You may use any of the examples you listed with your partner in Exercise II.
VGE GE SE LE N
Criteria
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
1. Presentation is organized.
TOTAL
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 25–30; GE – 19–24; SE – 13–18; LE – 7–12; N – 6
Reinforcement Activity
Take a look at the conversation below where the remark by a native English speaker
could be misinterpreted by a native Chinese listener.
In an essay with no less than 500 words, discuss where the confusion originated. Use
the following format: computerized, font 12, Times New Roman, spacing 1.5.
E-link
Hone your ability to recognize types of speech acts by checking the exercises found on
the websites below.
Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart
below.
I thought…
What were your thoughts or ideas about speech acts prior to the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
What new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
Lesson 3
Types of
Communicative Strategy
By the end of the lesson, you will have been able to
⌂ distinguish various types of communicative strategies;
⌂ use acceptable, polite, and meaningful communicative strategies;
⌂ engage in a communicative situation;
⌂ explain the effects of a shift in communicative strategy;
⌂ demonstrate effective use of communicative strategy in a variety of speech situations;
⌂ practice learning and thinking skills, life skills, and ICT literacy; and
⌂ reflect on your learning on the types of communicative strategy.
Let’s Warm Up
• After watching the video, group yourselves into five members each. Decide on the
“Most Exciting Tourist Spot” in the country. Assign a speaker who will share your
decision and reasons for this with the class. You have 10 minutes.
• As soon as all the groups have presented their decisions, you will vote for the “Most
Exciting Tourist Spot in the Philippines.”
49
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Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
50
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Let’s Work and Learn
Key Takeaways
People communicate every day to establish and maintain relationships, know and understand
themselves, and find meaning in the daily grind. Moreover, since humans are social beings
who survive more effectively through sensible discourses, they are always driven to learn the
skills of creating and sustaining meaningful conversations. Successful communication requires
understanding of the relationship between words and sentences and the speech acts they represent.
However, a conversation may be complex at times; that is why some people get lost along the
way and misunderstand each other. It is only when we willingly cooperate and speak in socially-
approved ways that we can make a conversation meaningful.
Since engaging in conversation is also bound by implicit rules, Cohen (1990) states that
strategies must be used to start and maintain a conversation. Knowing and applying grammar
appropriately is one of the most basic strategies to maintain a conversation. The following are
some strategies that people use when communicating.
1. Nomination
A speaker carries out nomination to collaboratively and productively establish a topic.
Basically, when you employ this strategy, you try to open a topic with the people you are
talking to.
When beginning a topic in a conversation, especially if it does not arise from a previous topic,
you may start off with news inquiries and news announcements as they promise extended
talk. Most importantly, keep the conversational environment open for opinions until the
prior topic shuts down easily and initiates a smooth end. This could efficiently signal the
beginning of a new topic in the conversation.
2. Restriction
Restriction in communication refers to any limitation you may have as a speaker. When
communicating in the classroom, in a meeting, or while hanging out with your friends,
you are typically given specific instructions that you must follow. These instructions
confine you as a speaker and limit what you can say.
For example, in your class, you might be asked by your teacher to brainstorm on peer
pressure or deliver a speech on digital natives. In these cases, you cannot decide to talk
about something else. On the other hand, conversing with your friends during ordinary
days can be far more casual than these examples. Just the same, remember to always be on
point and avoid sideswiping from the topic during the conversation to avoid communication
breakdown.
3. Turn-taking
Sometimes people are given unequal opportunities to talk because others take much time
during the conversation. Turn-taking pertains to the process by which people decide who
takes the conversational floor. There is a code of behavior behind establishing and sustaining
a productive conversation, but the primary idea is to give all communicators a chance to
speak.
Remember to keep your words relevant and reasonably short enough to express your views
or feelings. Try to be polite even if you are trying to take the floor from another speaker. Do
not hog the conversation and talk incessantly without letting the other party air out their
own ideas. To acknowledge others, you may employ visual signals like a nod, a look, or a step
back, and you could accompany these signals with spoken cues such as “What do you think?”
or “You wanted to say something?”
4. Topic Control
Topic control covers how procedural formality or informality affects the development of
topic in conversations. For example, in meetings, you may only have a turn to speak after the
chairperson directs you to do so. Contrast this with a casual conversation with friends over
lunch or coffee where you may take the conversational floor anytime.
Remember that regardless of the formality of the context, topic control is achieved
cooperatively. This only means that when a topic is initiated, it should be collectively
developed by avoiding unnecessary interruptions and topic shifts. You can make yourself
actively involved in the conversation without overly dominating it by using minimal
responses like “Yes,” “Okay,” “Go on”; asking tag questions to clarify information briefly like
“You are excited, aren’t you?”, “It was unexpected, wasn’t it?”; and even by laughing!
5. Topic Shifting
Topic shifting, as the name suggests, involves moving from one topic to another. In other
words, it is where one part of a conversation ends and where another begins.
When shifting from one topic to another, you have to be very intuitive. Make sure that the
previous topic was nurtured enough to generate adequate views. You may also use effective
conversational transitions to indicate a shift like “By the way,” “In addition to what you said,”
“Which reminds me of,” and the like.
6. Repair
Repair refers to how speakers address the problems in speaking, listening, and
comprehending that they may encounter in a conversation. For example, if everybody in the
conversation seems to talk at the same time, give way and appreciate other’s initiative to set
the conversation back to its topic.
Repair is the self-righting mechanism in any social interaction (Schegloff et al, 1977). If
there is a problem in understanding the conversation, speakers will always try to address
and correct it. Although this is the case, always seek to initiate the repair.
7. Termination
Termination refers to the conversation participants’ close-initiating expressions that end a
topic in a conversation. Most of the time, the topic initiator takes responsibility to signal the
end of the discussion as well.
Although not all topics may have clear ends, try to signal the end of the topic through
concluding cues. You can do this by sharing what you learned from the conversation.
Aside from this, soliciting agreement from the other participants usually completes the
discussion of the topic meaningfully.
Exercise I (Individual)
Identify the type of communicative strategy in each statement.
Let’s Practice
When writing your script for the commercial, answer these 10 questions.
• Why do tourists visit this place?
• What do many visitors like to do here?
• What would be best for a day trip?
• What should one do for a good night out?
• Where can visitors get the best food?
• Where can visitors buy their souvenirs?
• What outdoor activities are famous?
• What is amazing about the weather?
• What is the best thing to do here during summer?
• What do tourists say about this vacation spot?
Tip: Watch the suggested videos in the E-link section. They could help you improve your
tourism commercial.
The following rubric will be used in assessing your commercial, so make sure it meets the
criteria below.
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 17–20; GE – 13–16; SE – 9–12; LE – 5–8; N – 4
III. Pair Activity. Look for a partner. Think of three scenes from a movie or a TV show where
various communicative strategies were employed in one conversation. Watch the scenes and
evaluate the effect of the strategy applied to the conversation and to the characters.
List your evaluations in the table below.
Movie (scene
Communicative Effect on the Effect on the
and context;
strategy applied conversation characters
characters)
IV. Pair Activity. With the same partner, do the following:
1. Answer this question: How can the sudden change in communicative strategy in a
conversation affect the quality of interaction, the speaker-audience relationship, the role
and responsibilities of the speaker, the message, and the delivery?
2. Present your answers in a Powerpoint presentation. Make sure to give examples and to add
other types of media to support your answers.
3. Present it in five minutes.
4. Before the presentations, find another pair whose presentation you will evaluate using the
rubric below.
1. Presentation is organized.
TOTAL
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 37–45; GE – 28–36; SE – 19–27; LE – 10–18; N – 9
Name (Student 1):
Name (Student 2):
Their presentation has the following strong points: The following aspects of the presentation could be
improved:
Reinforcement Activity
Think of a time when you had to explain one message in two different instances with
varying contexts. For example, you might have told your parents over dinner how badly
you want to study in your dream university and in another instance, you talked about the
same thing with your friends while having coffee.
In an essay with a minimum of 500 words, discuss why your communicative strategies
change as there are adjustments in every speech context, speech style, and speech act.
Discuss your language, duration of interaction, your relationship to the listener, your
roles and responsibilities as a speaker, your message, and your delivery and how these
differ in the two varying instances and contexts.
Use the following format: font 12, Times New Roman; spacing, 1.5.
E-link
Hone your ability to recognize types of speech acts by checking the exercises found on
the following websites:
Reflect on the learning that you gained after taking up this lesson by completing the
given chart.
hat were your thoughts or ideas about the topic before taking up a lesson
I thought…
types of communication strategy?
I learned that…
hat new or additional ideas have you had after taking up this lesson?
58
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2016.
III
Unit
Fundamentals
of Public Speaking
This unit features the basics of preparing and delivering a speech. From the drafting of
your speech to its delivery, you will be guided with various strategies that you can apply to
successfully speak in public.
1
Principles of
Speech Writing
2 Principles of
Speech Delivery
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2016.
Lesson 1
Principles of
Speech Writing
By the end of the lesson, you will have been able to
⌂ identify the principles of speech writing;
⌂ differentiate the stages or processes in speech writing;
⌂ use principles of effective speech writing focusing on audience profile, logical organization,
duration, word choice, and grammatical correctness;
⌂ plan a speech;
⌂ evaluate a written speech;
⌂ apply principles of editing to a given speech;
⌂ apply learning and thinking skills, life skills, and ICT literacy in understanding the principles
of speech writing; and
⌂ reflect on your learning on the principles of speech writing.
Let’s Warm Up
You were assigned by your principal to be your school’s events planner. Now, your task is
to organize a welcome program for a foreign visitor.
You have ten minutes to discuss the steps you will take to organize the program. Assign one
representative who will share the output of the group for two minutes.
When done with the task, answer the following questions.
1. How did you plan for the program?
2. What difficulties did you encounter while planning?
60
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements says. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
61
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Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Individual)
Write T if the statement is true; write F if it is false.
1. An outline determines whether your supporting ideas match your main idea or not.
2. Any speech should include an introduction, body, and conclusion.
3. In the introduction, you explain the importance of your topic by giving examples.
4. Knowing the audience and the occasion is crucial in writing a speech.
5. Rehearsing is a major requirement.
6. Speech writing is a recursive process.
7. The approach that you will use in your introduction can determine the success of your
speech.
8. The primary objective of speech writing is getting the right or appropriate topic.
9. The purpose of the speech will help you identify ideas that will support your main
idea or message.
10. Word choice is one consideration in writing a speech.
Key Takeaways
Just like events planning, or any other activities, writing an effective speech follows certain
steps or processes. The process for writing is not chronological or linear; rather, it is recursive. That
means you have the opportunity to repeat a writing procedure indefinitely, or produce multiple
drafts first before you can settle on the right one. Figure 1 shows the schematic diagram.
Audience Analysis
Age Range
Male-Female Ratio
Educational Background
Educational Institution
Marital Status
Language Spoken
Religious Affiliations/beliefs
• The purpose for writing and delivering the speech can be classified into three—to inform, to
entertain, or to persuade.
Q An informative speech provides the audience with a clear understanding of the concept or
idea presented by the speaker.
Q An entertainment speech provides the audience with amusement.
Q A persuasive speech provides the audience with well-argued ideas that can influence their
own beliefs and decisions.
The purpose can be general and specific. Study the examples below to see the differences.
• The topic is your focal point of your speech, which can be determined once you have decided
on your purpose. If you are free to decide on a topic, choose one that really interests you. There
are a variety of strategies used in selecting a topic, such as using your personal experiences,
discussing with your family members or friends, free writing, listing, asking questions, or
semantic webbing.
• Narrowing down a topic means making your main idea more specific and focused. The
strategies in selecting a topic can also be used when you narrow down a topic.
In the example below, “Defining and developing effective money management skills of Grade
11 students” is the specific topic out of a general one, which is “Effective money
management.”
• Data gathering is the stage where you collect ideas, information, sources, and references
relevant or related to your specific topic. This can be done by visiting the library, browsing
the web, observing a certain phenomenon or event related to your topic, or conducting an
interview or survey. The data that you will gather will be very useful in making your speech
informative, entertaining, or persuasive.
• Writing patterns, in general, are structures that will help you organize the ideas related to
your topic. Examples are biographical, categorical/topical, causal, chronological,
comparison/contrast, problem-solution, and spatial.
Below are different writing patterns from which you can select the one that best suits your topic
and/or purpose.
Pattern Descriptions Examples
To inform my audience
about my grandfather, the
Presents Specific Purpose
late former President Ramon
descriptions of Magsaysay
Biographical your life or of a
person, famous Describing the life and works
of my grandfather, the late
or not Specific Topic
former President Ramon
Magsaysay
To persuade the community
members to reduce, reuse,
Specific Purpose and recycle as means of
Presents related eliminating garbage and
Categorical/ categories protecting the environment
Topical supporting the
topic Why the community
members should promote
Specific Topic
reducing, reusing, and
recycling
To inform my audience on
Specific Purpose
the effects of overeating
Presents cause-
Causal Explaining the possible
effect relationships
Specific Topic effects of overeating to one’s
health
To inform my audience
about the significant events
Specific Purpose
in the 1986 EDSA Revolution
Presents the idea or People Power
Chronological
in time order Describing the significant
events before, during,
Specific Topic
and after the 1986 EDSA
Revolution or People Power
To persuade the audience
that living in the Philippines
Presents Specific Purpose
is better than living in
Comparison/ comparison/ Australia
contrast contrast of two or
three points Explaining why the
Specific Topic Philippines is more habitable
than Australia
To persuade the audience
to support the educational
Specific Purpose
Presents an programs of the national
identified government
problem, its Explaining the reasons for
Problem-solution
causes, and supporting the government’s
recommended educational programs seen
solutions Specific Topic
as the primary means of
increasing the literacy rate in
the Philippines
• An outline is a hierarchical list that shows the relationship of your ideas. Experts in public
speaking state that once your outline is ready, two-thirds of your speech writing is finished. A
good outline helps you see that all the ideas are in line with your main idea or message. The
elements of an outline include introduction, body, and conclusion. Write your outline based on
how you want your ideas to develop. Below are some of the suggested formats.
1. Table format
Purpose To persuade
To persuade the community members to reduce, reuse, and recycle as means
Specific purpose
of eliminating garbage and protecting the environment
Promoting the importance of reducing, reusing, and recycling in eliminating
Topic
wastes and protecting the environment
Pattern Problem-solution
Share facts on the current situation of the environment.
Introduction
State the message of the speech (specific topic).
Discuss how improper waste disposal becomes an environmental problem.
Body Explain how reducing, reusing, and recycling would eliminate wastes and
protect the environment.
State the specific purpose of your speech again.
Conclusion
Call for action.
2. List format
• The body of the speech provides explanations, examples, or any details that can help you
deliver your purpose and explain the main idea of your speech.
One major consideration in developing the body of your speech is the focus or central idea. The
body of your speech should only have one central idea.
The following are some strategies to highlight your main idea.
Q Present real-life or practical examples
Q Show statistics
Q Present comparisons
Q Share ideas from the experts or practitioners
• The introduction is the foundation of your speech. Here, your primary goal is to get the
attention of your audience and present the subject or main idea of your speech. Your first few
words should do so. The following are some strategies.
Q Use a real-life experience and connect that experience to your subject.
Q Use practical examples and explain their connection to your subject.
Q Start with a familiar or strong quote and then explain what it means.
Q Use facts or statistics and highlight their importance to your subject.
Q Tell a personal story to illustrate your point.
• The conclusion restates the main idea of your speech. Furthermore, it provides a summary,
emphasizes the message, and calls for action. While the primary goal of the introduction is to
get the attention of your audience, the conclusion aims to leave the audience with a memorable
statement.
The following are some strategies.
Q Begin your conclusion with a restatement of your message.
Q Use positive examples, encouraging words, or memorable lines from songs or stories
familiar to your audience.
Q Ask a question or series of questions that can make your audience reflect or ponder.
Make your speech memorable by using these strategies: surprise the audience, use vivid
descriptive images, write well-crafted and memorable lines, and use figures of speech.
• Rehearsing gives you an opportunity to identify what works and what does not work for
you and for your target audience. Some strategies include reading your speech aloud,
recording for your own analysis or for your peers or coaches to give feedback on your
delivery. The best thing to remember at this stage is: “Constant practice makes perfect.”
Exercise II (Pair)
Based on what you have learned in this lesson, list at least ten principles or
characteristics of speech writing.
Example:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
I. Group Activity. Work with your group mates from Let’s Warm Up. Read the sample speech
below, and then, using the Six Power Principles for Speech Editing of Andrew Dlugan, edit the
speech. Underline the part which you think needs editing for focus, clarity, concision, continuity,
variety, and impact and beauty. Then, write the revised version in the second column and the
principle you used in the last column.
Speech Editing
Speech Title: May Fifteen Edited/Revised Version
Principle
May 15 of this year, I woke up with a
happy heart. I thought to myself, “when I
reach 50 years old, 60 or beyond, I will look
back to this day and smile.” Then, I paid
attention to my college graduation picture,
framed on a 4x6 decorative wood edging
emblazoned with beautiful memories. I
reached for it, and held it closely, and
uttered, “10 years, and I think you did a pretty
good job!” I slowly put it back to the side
table,
off to my working station across my sliding
window to fulfill one in my daily routine:
journal writing.
Then, I started: Dear journal, “In my 10
years as a member of the noblest profession
in the universe, I have encountered several
influential, inspiring and fabulous people.
So, today, as a tribute, I’m going to write
about them, starting off with my top three
favorites”.
To begin with, I did not like my first
pick. She was someone who would always,
always disagree with my ideas and decisions.
I remember one time while I asked her to
sign my college admission papers, she was
infuriated because of my choice because I
ticked Mass Communications as my priority.
It was a very long battle of verbal argument.
As expected, I did not win. Another, I came
home from school sharing I would want to
extract the tooth of my lab partner without
an anesthesia because he’s irresponsible
and ridiculous. Instead of letting me vent
and giving me a back rub, she defended the
behavior of my lab partner saying, “He must
have a bad day. You have to understand.”
Precisely, she’s a devil’s advocate.
Speech Editing
Speech Title: May Fifteen Edited/Revised Version
Principle
But, I have loved her. In fact, I have been
playing as a devil’s advocate since college. I
think it’s important to see a situation from
different perspectives. In that sense, I can
think critically and make reasonable decisions.
In the academic context, I employ it as a
strategy to make my students be effective
communicators, critical and creative thinkers,
service-driven citizens, and reflective life-long
learners through exposing them to several
relevant activities. I learned this from her, from
someone I know a devil’s advocate.
However, she left me. And for once, it
broke my heart.
If United Kingdom has the late Margaret
Thatcher, and China has Wu Yi, I have a
friend, too, an Iron Lady who is my second
choice. And, I’m lucky to have known her.
Coined by Russian journalist Captain Yuri
Gavrilov in 1976, the iron metaphor is used to
describe a lady who is “strong-willed”. Strong-
willed, that’s a perfect word that describes
my friend. I was in grade six back then when
I witnessed the misery that happened to her
family. I knew how it felt though I was still
younger. Their business went bankrupt; her
husband was hospitalized fighting against
death; and, she was falling downward spiral.
But, she did not let go. She stood her ground,
fought back, and turned every tragedy into
triumph. That’s why she’s an Iron Lady to me.
Being strong-willed and turning tragedy
into triumph are lessons which I learned from
my Iron Lady friend. Had I not applied these
lessons to my personal and professional life,
I would have lost my sanity and remained
miserable.
However, she left me. And for the second
time, it broke my heart.
Of course, we all have heard the story
about a university professor who sought a
Japanese master for enlightenment about
his questions on Zen. The master served the
professor with tea, poured the cup full, and
kept on pouring. The professor suddenly
said, “It is overflowing”. The master replied,
“You are like this cup. I cannot show you Zen
unless you empty your cup.”
Speech Editing
Speech Title: May Fifteen Edited/Revised Version
Principle
I first learned this story from my third
choice, i.e., my teacher who I used to call
master. That was supposed to be a life-
changing tale for me because I was very
stubborn and unreceptive back then. But, my
master taught me to be more open with new
perspectives and continue to seek inspirations
from other people who I can call masters,
too, and to absorb and just filter later. As
Bruce Lee said, “Absorb what is useful.”
Hopefully, after I have taken everything in,
I will have evolved into a better educator,
just like my master and ultimately, a better
creative person. I want to reach that “zen
point”, where everything is intuitive and
instinctive, where teaching and I are one (like
the samurai and the sword are one), where I
can see beyond what my eyes tell me as what
swordsman Miyamoto Musashi said.
Yes, I am aware of the dangers of having
too many masters. But mixed martial arts
taught us that we can learn different fighting
styles from different masters, and eventually,
evolve into a well-rounded warrior. I guess
the secret lies in keeping an open mind. I
learned that from my master. So, I just make
sure that when I meet other people and listen
to their stories, I go with an empty cup.
Nevertheless, she left me. Again, it broke
my heart.
Right after I signed on my journal entry, I
heard euphonous voices of these three
personalities fused into one calling my
name. It was my mom. She came in to my
room with two pieces of cake each shaped
with letters P and J enough to be carried by
her hands. The letters are initials of my first
name- Philippe John. Planted on the edge of
each cake were five tiny well-lit candles. I
stood from my post, grabbed the pieces from
my mom’s shaky hands, and put them on my
desk. Then, I hugged her. It was one of the
tightest hugs I had given her. And, she told
me, “You’re now a decade young teacher.
Way to go, my love, and I promise I will not
leave you anymore. Never.”
I couldn’t thank her more. May 15 of
this year, I woke up with a happy heart. And,
again. I thought to myself, “when I reach 50
years old, 60 or beyond, I will look back to
this day again and again and again.”
II. Individual Activity. Following the speech writing process, prepare/plan a speech to be delivered
in class. As you go along, make sure to fill in the details in the columns with the ideas you have
decided on.
A. Conduct a general audience analysis. Use the sheet below.
Age Range
Male-Female Ratio
Educational Background
Educational Institution
Marital Status
Economic Status (Household income
above 30,000 or below 30,000)
Language Spoken
Religious Affiliations/beliefs
B. Identify your general and specific purpose. Use the sheet below.
General Purpose
Specific Purpose
C. Identify your topic. Use any strategy learned from this lesson. Use the sheet below.
General Purpose
Specific Purpose
Topic
D. Narrow down your topic. Use any strategy learned from this lesson. Use the sheet below.
General Purpose
Specific Purpose
Topic
Specific (Narrowed-
down) Topic
E. Decide how you will gather data. Will you be visiting your library, browsing the web,
observing, or conducting an interview or survey? Once you have decided, gather all necessary
and relevant information.
F. Identify the speech pattern you will use. Will it be biographical, categorical/topical, causal,
chronological, comparison/contrast, or problem-solution? Use the sheet below.
General Purpose
Specific Purpose
Topic
Specific (Narrowed-
down) Topic
Speech Pattern
G. Prepare an outline for your speech using any of the formats discussed. Use the sheet below.
General Purpose
Specific Purpose
Topic
Specific (Narrowed-
down) Topic
Speech Pattern
Outline
III. Individual-Pair Activity.
Find a partner and exchange works with him/her. For five minutes, review
your partner’s work and write your feedback. Use the sheet below.
General Comments
However, the speech needs to improve on…
Reinforcement Activity
Find one speech writer in your community and interview him/her on his/her experiences in
speech writing. Then, using a minimum of 500 words, make a written report about his/her
responses.
Use the following format: computerized, font 12, Times New Roman, 1.5 spacing.
E-link
Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart below.
I thought…
oughts or ideas about the principles of speech writing prior to the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
What new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
Lesson 2
Principles of
Speech Delivery
By the end of the lesson, you will have been able to
⌂ differentiate the types of speech delivery;
⌂ identify public speaking situations;
⌂ identify the characteristics of good delivery;
⌂ use principles of effective speech delivery focusing on articulation, modulation, stage
presence, facial expression, gestures and movements, and rapport with the audience;
⌂ practice speech delivery;
⌂ evaluate a speech;
⌂ apply learning and thinking skills, life skills, and ICT literacy in understanding the principles
of speech delivery; and
⌂ reflect on your learning on the principles of speech delivery.
Let’s Warm Up
You are the tourism ambassadors of the Philippines who are tasked to promote the best
features of the country and its overall positive image to local and foreign visitors. Your task is to
prepare and deliver a three-minute speech in a World Tourism Expo in London to convince the
participants to visit the Philippines.
You have 10 minutes to prepare the speech. Everyone should have a speaking task. Make sure that
your speech is clear and persuasive.
After your group’s performance, two representatives from another group will be assigned by your
teacher to provide feedback within three minutes based on the following questions.
1. What do you like most about the presentation?
2. How do you think can the speech be improved?
77
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you practice
what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that there are no
wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in completing this
task.
6. I vary my speed.
7. I modulate my voice.
TOTAL
78
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Class-Pair)
1. Watch any of the following videos of the World Champions of Public Speaking. All of the
featured speakers are winners of a public speaking competition organized by Toastmasters
International.
• Dananjaya Hettiarchchi of Sri Lanka, 2014 Champion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bbz2boNSeL0
• Presiyan Vasilev of USA, 2013 Champion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9k92IGhnLig
• Ryan Avery of USA, 2012 Champion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ReE7-X70iPU
• Jock Elliot of Australia, 2011 Champion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m0a_EcZyQts
• Jim Key of USA, 2003 Champion
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kBdWyzjrjK0
Key Takeaways
After listening to the speeches of the champions, you may have noticed that aside from the speech
content, their delivery was also essential to their victory. The speakers seemed so natural and at ease that
you wonder: Are effective speakers made, or are they naturally born effective speakers? It is true that
some people are born with special gifts in public speaking, but it is also true that most of the best public
speakers either underwent intensive formal training or got involved in several speaking situations that,
over time, enabled them to hone the skill.
According to Stephen Lucas (2011), author of The Art of Public Speaking, a good delivery means that
you are capable and able to present your message in a clear, coherent, and interesting way. In addition to
this, he also says:
Good delivery…conveys the speaker’s ideas clearly, interestingly, and without distracting
the audience. Most audiences prefer delivery that combines a certain degree of formality with
the best attributes of good conversation—directness, spontaneity, animation, vocal and facial
expressiveness, and a lively sense of communication (p. 244).
As a student of public speaking, you should know that public speaking is not simply reading your
speech or talking about your topic. It requires making connections with your audience and presenting
yourself formally to the public. There are types of speeches according to purpose and delivery from which
you can choose the best one or the most appropriate in a given situation.
2. Impromptu
3. Manuscript
4. Memorized
1. Extemporaneous
2. Impromptu
3. Manuscript
4. Memorized
Bear in mind that not all speaking situations happen in the classroom. Some may happen
in unfamiliar environments. To illustrate, you may run or be nominated for a school or local
government office, so a room-to-room and public campaign speech is required; or you may be
invited to welcome a visitor in your school or community, so an opening or welcoming remark is
necessary; or you may be asked to represent your school or community in a literary contest. These
are a few situations where your delivery skill will be simultaneously challenged and honed.
As a public speaker you need to be ready to deal with the most common challenges in different
speaking environments. Below are some of them.
1. Speaking to a specific audience size
Description • Examples are open courts or grounds, football fields, farms, etc.
Advantages • You will feel more relaxed due to the atmosphere of the venue.
Disadvantages • You will encounter a lot of communication barriers such as noise,
inattentive audiences, discomfort, challenging weather, possible absence of
technology such as audio-visual equipment, etc.
•
You might be forced to make adjustments, especially in voice projection.
Tips • Check the venue prior to your speaking engagement.
• Ask the organizers about the availability of equipment.
• Challenge yourself on how you can get and maintain the attention of your
audience.
• Use the outdoor setting or venue to your advantage as a way of
jumpstarting your speech or as an example to support your main point.
• Practice, practice, practice.
Advantages • You will be exposed to different venues, which will add to your public
speaking experience.
Disadvantages • You will have to make big adjustments in terms of your nonverbal
cues: volume of voice, body language, facial expression, etc.
Tips • Check the venue days before your scheduled speech and arrive hours
earlier in the venue, so you can determine the adjustments to make.
• For a large venue, speak more slowly, use pauses frequently to highlight the
most important ideas of your speech, and make use of facial expressions
and gestures. When you use visual aids, make them more visible.
• In a small venue, your audience will see you up close. Therefore, manage
your notes well when you use them and adjust your nonverbal cues as
necessary.
• Practice, practice, practice.
4. Speaking with a microphone
Description • Its main function is to increase the volume of your voice, not to clarify
the pronunciation and enunciation of words.
Advantages • With a microphone, you can easily get the attention of your audience
because of the loudness of your voice.
Disadvantages • Using a microphone can be challenging because there is a tendency to
underuse or overuse it.
Tips • Check the microphone if it functions well.
• Check your voice in the microphone to see whether you are audible
enough.
• In a small venue, you may not use a microphone, but you need to
manage your voice’s volume well.
• Practice, practice, practice.
Description • A podium or lectern is a reading desk with a stand and a slanted top.
Advantages • Notes can be placed on the slanted top, and will work best for
extemporaneous and manuscript speeches.
•
The lectern can be used as a means to hide or cover nervousness or stage
fright.
Disadvantages • Some may have the tendency to hide their hands behind the podium,
which will not help them enhance their message.
Tips • Stand straight, as good posture exudes confidence.
• Avoid gripping the edges of the podium with both hands. Aside from this,
also avoid hiding them behind the podium.
• For extemporaneous and impromptu speakers, step to the side occasionally
once you have composed yourself, so you can effectively use your gestures,
make eye contact, and connect more with your audience.
•
Practice, practice, practice.
Whatever speaking situation you are in, the most important thing is you master your speech. You can
only do this by constantly carrying out the right practices.
To be effective in your delivery, watch and emulate people who speak in public excellently. While
observing, take note of the following:
• How they approach their audience (formal, informal, personal, conversational, intimate, among
others)
• How they connect with their audience (using eye contact, body movements, and facial expressions)
• How they present themselves (stage presence: how they look, stand, walk, use nonverbal cues, act
on and off the stage)
• How they use their voice in terms of volume (loudness or softness), pitch (highness or lowness),
rate or speed, pauses to show emphasis and strengthen the clarity of the message, vocal variety
(effective changes in volume, pitch, rate and pauses), and pronunciation
The items enumerated are the tools that can help you develop your speech. Practice in front of a
mirror and observe your own delivery with these tools in mind. Alternatively, you can practice in front
of your family, friends, classmates, or those who have already done public speaking. You can ask for
feedback or seek advice from them. Explore which tools work best for you and develop a habit of
effective delivery to enhance your public speaking skill. Keep practicing and engaging yourself in
speaking situations. Remember, you already have the public speaking skill, but you will only improve if
you speak in public constantly.
Following are more techniques and tips to help you deliver your speech well:
1. Use a conversational style more often. This is the style that is more natural; it is the style that you
always use when you express yourself with your family and friends. Audience members do not
like the speaker to sound unnatural or exaggerated.
2. Look your audience members in the eye so they will feel that they are part of your speech. Eye
contact should be maintained to keep the attention of your audience and enhance your delivery.
3. Remember to adjust your volume to the size of the audience and the venue. When addressing a
large audience, modulate your voice in such a way that you speak loudly without sounding like
shouting or yelling.
4. Vary your rate or speed to keep your audience interested and to avoid a monotone pattern. The
audience might get bored if you speak very slowly and they might get confused if you speak very
fast. Hence, your rate should be at an appropriate speed.
5. Master your voice and find your pitch level (high or low). If you have a high pitch level,
modulate or slightly move it down. If you have a low pitch level, modulate or slightly move it
up. Your performance will definitely be affected if you do not modulate.
6. Use pauses when you emphasize the most important words, phrases, or sentences. Your pauses
should not last for three seconds. Otherwise, it will result in dead air or a moment of awkward
silence.
7. Pronounce and enunciate words correctly. You will confuse the audience if you mispronounce
words, and it could distract them and affect your credibility.
8. Avoid fillers or expressions that substitute actual words in your speech because these words are
distracting. Examples of fillers are “like,” “um,” “ah,” “uh,” and “er.” To reduce the use of these
fillers, detect the instances when you use them: Do you generally use fillers after each sentence,
between different ideas, or whenever you make transitions? Then, instead of using them the next
time you deliver a speech, simply stop and pause.
9. Start your speech by standing straight and balancing your weight. This will give a positive first
impression.
10. Use precise movements. Avoid distracting mannerisms like swaying back and forth, leaning
on the podium, licking or biting your lips, playing with your wristwatch or jewelry, scratching
parts of your body, frowning, and others. Observe your mannerisms and learn how to avoid
them when speaking in public.
11. Avoid having a poker face or a highly animated face. These facial expressions appear distracting
and may even be annoying. Instead, follow the most highly suggested tip: smile. However,
make sure that the meaning of your speech reflects in your facial expressions; do not smile if
you are talking about something sad.
12. Dress properly and appropriately. Wearing the proper attire will make you look more confident
and professional. Make sure not to overdress, as this may distract your audience.
13. Observe ethics by coming prepared, being honest with your words, being polite, avoiding
offensive words and back-biting or talking negative things about other people, or copying
someone’s work without proper documentation.
14. Breathe in and out to relax before your speech. Most importantly, have fun.
Example:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Let’s Practice
I. Group Activity. Work with your group mates from Exercise II. Below are links to empowering
speeches delivered by inspiring people at an event organized by the nonprofit organization, TED
(Technology, Entertainment, and Design).
As a group, watch any of the videos. Alternatively, you may refer to this link http://www.ted.com/talks
for other options. Then, do the task that follows.
• Why We Tell Stories by Patricia Evangelista
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GczfdbrQNzc
• Our Return on Investment by Sabsy Ongkiko (spoken in Tagalog)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgOi4ZR57fA
• Why I Must Come out by Geena Rocero
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCZCok_u37w
• Balikbayan by Michi Ferreol
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6cgIslzZE5c
• How Lupang Hinirang Ought to be Sung by Joey Ayala
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41guxaNk9FY
• Who Killed Philippine Cinema? by Pepe Diokno
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plNNkf90jUU
• The Future of Manila by Carlos Celdran
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DyGxQhnq-TI
Evaluate the speaker and complete the following table with your assessment.
Name of Speaker:
Did the speaker adjust to the audience size and venue size?
Abridged Version of the Inaugural Address of His Excellency Ramon Magsaysay, Former
President of the Republic of the Philippines
My Countrymen:
You have called upon me to assume the highest office within our gift. I accept the
trust humbly and gratefully. My sole determination is to be President for the people.
The office of President is the highest in the land. It can be the humblest also, if
we regard it – as we must – in the light of basic democratic principles. The first of
these principles is the declaration of the Constitution that “sovereignty resides in
the people and all government authority emanates from them.” This simply means
that all of us in public office are but servants of the people.
As I see it, your mandate in the past election was not a license for the selfish
enjoyment of power by any man or group of men. On the contrary, it was an
endorsement of the principle – at times forgotten – that the general welfare is the
only justification for the exercise of governmental power and authority.
Your mandate was a clear and urgent command to establish for our people a
government based upon honesty and morality; a government sensitive to your
1 needs, dedicated to your best interests, and inspired by our highest ideals of man’s
liberty.
We have a glorious past. Now we must build a future worthy of that past.
It is significant that we begin on this day and on this ground hallowed by the
supreme sacrifice of Jose Rizal. All too often, however, we speak of Rizal – and of
Del Pilar, Bonifacio, Mabini, and our host of heroes – as if their work were done, as
if today their spirit had ceased to have any meaning or value to our people. The
truth is that we need their spirit now more than ever. We need it to complete the
work which they began.
We need men of integrity and faith like Rizal and Del Pilar; men of action
like Bonifacio; men of inflexible patriotism like Mabini. We need their zeal, their self-
reliance, their capacity for work, their devotion to service, their ability to lose
themselves in the common cause of building a nation.
I will have such men. From this day, the members of my administration,
beginning with myself, shall cease to belong to our parties, to our families, even to
ourselves. We shall belong only to the people.
In the administration of public affairs, all men entrusted with authority must
adhere firmly to the ideals and principles of the Constitution.
I will render – and demand – uncompromising loyalty to the basic tenet of our
Constitution; that you, the people, are sovereign. The rule of government must be
of service to you.
Accordingly, I pledge my administration to your service. I pledge that we
shall extend the protection of the law to everyone, fairly and impartially – to the
rich and the poor, the learned and the unlettered – recognizing no party but the
nation, no family but the great family of our race, no interest save the common
welfare.
The Bill of Rights shall be for me, and the members of my administration, a
bill of duties. We shall be guardians of the freedom and dignity of the individual.
2 More than this, we shall strive to give meaning and substance to the
liberties guaranteed by our Constitution – by helping our citizens to attain the
economic well-being so essential to the enjoyment of civil and political rights.
The separation of powers ordained by our Constitution – as an effective
safeguard against tyranny – shall be preserved zealously. Mutual respect for the
rights and prerogative of each of the three great departments of government
must be observed. […]
Heretofore, social justice has raised fervent but frustrated hopes in the hearts
of our less fortunate citizens. We must not permit social justice to be an empty
phrase in our Constitution. We must bring it to life for all.
In consonance with this purpose, my administration shall take positive,
energetic measures to improve the living conditions of our fellow citizens in the
barrios and neglected rural areas and of laborers in our urban and industrial
centers. […]
The problems and opportunities ahead of us set the measure of the effort we
must exert in the years to come. We must have unity to solve our problems,
cooperation to exploit our opportunities. I urge you to forego partisan differences
whenever the national interest clearly demands united action. We must not be
distracted from our work. We have no time for petty strife.
I have been warned that too much is expected of this administration, that our
people expect the impossible. For this young and vigorous nation of ours, nothing
is really impossible!
Let us have faith in ourselves, the same faith that fired the heroic generation
of revolution. They waged and won their struggle with nothing but bolos in their
4
hands and courage in their hearts. Without political training and experience, they
wrote a constitution comparable with the best and established the first republic
in Asia. Our own generation was told by doubters and enemies that we would
never have independence from the United States. We live today under a free and
sovereign Republic. Our faith was fulfilled.
Today, we are told anew that it is impossible to do what must be done. But
our people, sustained by God, under whose protection we have placed our
destiny and happiness, and strengthened by an abiding faith in His goodness and
mercy – our people, united and free – shall shape a future worthy of our noble
heritage if we but act; act together; act wisely; act with courage; and act
unselfishly, in a spirit of patriotic dedication.
Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. (December 1953). Inaugural Address of President
Magsaysay, December 30, 1953.
Performance Rubric
VGE GE SE LE N
Category Scoring Criteria
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
Speech style was conversational.
Fillers were avoided.
Volume was well-adjusted to audience size.
Verbal Skills Rate or speed of speaking was varied.
Voice was modulated.
Pauses were effectively used.
Words were pronounced and enunciated well.
Eye contact was effectively used.
Speaker was prepared and confident.
Non-verbal Distracting movements or mannerisms were avoided.
Skills
Facial expressions were appropriate to the message.
Mastery of the speech was evident.
TOTAL
Below are the strengths of my classmate Below are the areas that can be improved on
Reinforcement Activity
Interview a local official or a student government officer on his/her experiences in public
speaking (campaign speeches, reading of policy or memo in public, introducing a speaker,
giving of welcome/opening or closing remarks, inspirational talk, etc). Then, with a minimum
of 500 words, make a written report about their responses.
Follow the format: computerized, font 12, Times New Roman, 1.5 spacing.
E-link
Hone your knowledge of the principles of speech delivery by checking the websites below.
Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart below.
I thought…
oughts or ideas about the principles of speech delivery prior to the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
What new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
92
All rights reserved. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means -
electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2016.
IV
Unit
Types of Speech
In this unit, you will apply the fundamentals that were discussed during the previous
units. Each lesson focuses on one type of speech, so that in the end you can write and deliver
various kinds of speeches depending on your purpose or your method of delivery.
2
Organizing and Delivering a
Memorized Speech
4
Organizing and Delivering an
Extemporaneous Speech
6
Organizing and Delivering an
Informative Speech
Let’s Warm Up
1. Find a partner. Assign a reader and a listener.
2. The task of the reader is to read aloud the following lines from Marianne Williamson’s
A Return To Love: Reflections on the Principles of A Course in Miracles while the task
of the listener is to give feedback on the performance of the reader based on the
Rubric for Oral Presentation.
Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are
powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask
ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not
to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing
enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all
meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is
within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we
unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our
own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.
3. When done, exchange roles with your partner and do the same routine.
4. Then, share your feedback and observations on your partner’s speech delivery.
5. You have ten minutes to do this activity.
94
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
95
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Group)
Here is a link to the video of Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago’s speech titled A Date
with Destiny: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdWaESUSyoM
Watch the video. Then, work in groups of five and discuss your answers to the following
questions:
Key Takeaways
When speaking from a manuscript, you write and deliver a speech word for word. The question
is, for whom is the manuscript method most advantageous?
1. Public figures. Since public figures are always constrained by a hectic schedule, they need
ghost writers. Consequently, they would have to read the text of the speech as it is. The
President’s State of the Nation Address (SONA) is a concrete example of this situation.
2. Media personalities. Speakers on radio and television always battle with time limits. For
example, a televised panel discussion about a social issue may require radio and TV anchors
to critically choose and refine the words of their speech in advance.
3. Spokespersons for government and private organizations. This public speaking role requires
a great deal of contemplation and preparation. For example, we have speeches of different
country’s spokespersons in an international seminar on climate change.
1. Since this type of speech follows a word-for-word method, you might be tempted to skip
practicing the speech.
2. In relation to the previous point, if you fail to practice your speech and decide to read it during
the time of delivery itself, you might be glued to the speech all throughout. You may overlook
making eye contact with your audience. Note that glancing at the audience only at the end of a
sentence is not sufficient to establish and maintain rapport during the speech.
3. Lastly, because everything is planned based on the time allotted, you will surely want to cover
everything in your speech before you run out of time. This might affect your connection with the
audience, as there is a tendency to ignore the audience and neglect responding to their feedback
when busy with the speech. Pay attention and make sure to check and adjust if the audience
displays anxiety, impatience, or boredom.
Strategies in Organizing and Delivering the Manuscript Speech
1. Practice! Practice delivering the speech several times. Mark the text. Even if it’s a manuscript, know
the speech by heart. Only if you do these can you keep frequent eye contact with the audience.
2. Adapt! Even if you have a manuscript, feel free to modify the text when the situation demands it.
If you observe that your audience is bored, you may use shorter yet more vigorous words. If your
audience is impatient, add words of strong motivational power. If your audience is anxious, share
personal anecdotes to lighten the mood.
Exercise II (Group)
Work with the same group from Exercise I. Below is an extract from the manuscript of
the speech of former US President, Ronald Reagan, along with his edits.
1. Study the page and discuss your answer to this question: Why do you think President
Reagan edited the following parts of his manuscript before his speech?
Extract 1
Draft: Yet it is our nature as a free people to make manifest our goodwill. So we must
strive to reduce arms on both sides.
Edits: We seek peace and we must strive to reduce arms on both sides.
Extract 2
Draft: Beginning 10 years ago, the Soviets challenged the Western Alliance with a grave
new threat: the deployment of hundreds of nuclear missiles capable of striking
every capital in Europe.
Edits: Beginning 10 years ago, the Soviets challenged the Western Alliance with a grave
new threat: hundreds of new and more deadly nuclear missiles - the Triple
Warhead SS-20, capable of striking every capital of Europe.
Original Manuscript
Ronald Reagan’s “Tear Down This Wall” manuscript draft
2. Study the last paragraph of President Raegan’s speech.
But through it all, the Alliance held firm. And I invite those who protested then—I invite those
who protest today—to mark this fact: Because we remained firm, the Soviets came back to
the table. Because we remained strong, today we have within reach the possibility, not merely
of limiting the growth of arms, but of eliminating, for the first time, an entire class of nuclear
Let’s Practice
I. Group Activity. Work in groups of nine and assign a number from 1-9 to each of the members.
Imagine that you are delivering an inaugural address as the President of the Philippines.
Use the inaugural address of His Excellency Diosdado Macapagal taken from the Official
Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines.
The transcript is divided into nine parts; each member of the group will deliver to the class the
part corresponding to his number. You have 20 minutes to prepare.
INAUGURAL ADDRESS OF HIS EXCELLENCY DIOSDADO MACAPAGAL
[Delivered at the Quirino Grandstand, Manila, December 30, 1961]
“OUR MISSION”
On this day, December 30, our national hero Jose Rizal gave his life on this
hallowed ground – the ideal manifestation of love of country and dedication to the
service of our people. It was therefore fitting that the framers of our Constitution
should decree that the highest official of the land shall be called upon to assume
1
office on this historical occasion. With deep humility, I accept the Nation’s call to duty.
Bound by the oath I have just taken, I am resolved that I shall be the President
not only of the members of my party but of all political groups; I shall be President
not only of the rich but more so of the poor; and I shall be President not only of one
sector but of all the people.
The primary function of the President is not to dispense favors but to dispense
1 justice. The presidential oath of office contains the special pledge to “do justice to every
man.”
These shall not remain empty words, for with God’s help, I shall do justice to every
citizen, no matter how exalted or how humble may be his station in life.
As we open a new era in the life of our Nation, let us measure the tasks before us
and set forth our goals. Our aims are two-fold: first, to solve the immediate problems of
the present and, second, to build materially and spiritually for the future.
Our first mission is the solution of the problem of corruption. We assume leadership
2 at a time when our Nation is in the throes of a moral degeneration unprecedented in
our national history. Never within the span of human memory has graft permeated
every level of government. The solution of this problem shall call for the exercise of the
tremendous persuasive power of the Presidency. I shall consider it, therefore, my duty
to set a personal example in honesty and uprightness. We must prove that ours is not a
Nation of hopeless grafters but a race of good and decent men and women.
I intend to do more than this. Among the appropriate measures I shall take to insure
the eradication of this social cancer is to assume moral and political responsibility for
the general state of public morality in the country.
Our second mission is to attain self-sufficiency food of our people, namely, rice
and corn. The elemental needs of every people are food, clothing and shelter. We
shall give impetus to industries that will provide clothing for our population at
reasonable prices. In collaboration with private enterprise, we shall invigorate the
3 national housing program and devote particular attention to proper housing for
countrymen who earn the lowest income and the indigents who live under subhuman
conditions.
While attending to the people’s need for adequate clothing and shelter, the urgent
emphasis shall be on their need for staple food. With the cooperation of Congress, we
shall launch and implement a rice and corn program that shall bring about sufficiency
in the production of these cereals and make them available at prices within the reach
of the masses.
The basic national problem is the poverty of the masses. Our third mission, therefore,
is the creation of conditions that will provide more income for our people – income
for those who have none and more income for those whose earnings are inadequate
for their elemental needs. Millions of our people are unemployed and millions more
are under-employed. We must rectify this situation to help our people attain a higher
level of living and create the domestic buying power that can help generate prosperity.
Unless solved in time, this problem will worsen to the point of disaster in view of our
population explosion.
4 The permanent solution to this problem is the rapid and sound utilization of our
vast and rich natural resources in order to create opportunities for employment. We
believe that the effective accomplishment of this task should be left to the citizens
themselves, that is, to private enterprise. But the Government can and should help. Our
Administration shall extend this help. Within the maximum financial capacity of the
Government, we shall initiate and carry out a program to help solve unemployment and
underemployment through massive productive and labor-intensive projects calculated to
create multiple job opportunities while at the same time increasing the production,
productivity and wealth of the land.
This then, in synthesis, is our mission, the trust that has been placed in our hands
by our people. We are called upon to attend to all functions of government, including
foreign relations in which we shall vigorously discharge our part in the struggle against
communism and strive to raise the prestige of the Republic before the family of nations.
While ministering to all the traditional public services, it is in the accomplishment of
these five missions that we must place stress and primary attention, for their solution
will facilitate the effective ministration of all the essential public services the government
is duty bound to maintain.
7
It is incorrect to say that we are out to solve all the problems of the Nation.
No President can do that. Nation-building is an exacting and endless endeavor. No
President can build the whole edifice of a nation. All that he is called upon to do, is to
add a fine stone to that edifice, so that those who shall come after him may add other
fine stones that will go for a strong and enduring structure. I stress anew that stone
that we are assigned to contribute to the edifice of a greater Philippines is, first, to
attend to such short-range problems as sufficiency in the staple food of the people,
and more employment, and second, to undertake a long-range task of moral
renaissance and the implementation of a socio-economic blueprint which, although
not immediately achieving prosperity, will lead to that prosperity for all our people.
I believe that this is a mission formidable enough for any President. It is an
endeavor that calls for the utmost use of sound judgment, energy and, above all,
patriotism, which is demanded of all of us. It addresses itself to the leaders the three
great branches of our Government. It requires, on the part of all, a transfiguration of
attitude from political partisanship to statesmanship. In the deliberations of Congress
on the proclamation of the President and the Vice-President, the leaders and
members of Congress demonstrated their capacity to rise above partisan politics and
proved themselves equal to the challenge of patriotism. I express the hope that this
8 congressional performance was not a mere involuntary recognition of an undeniable
political fact but a willful recognition of the need of setting aside political partisanship
in this time of national crisis in the interest of bipartisan collaboration in the common
task of providing, in the least time possible, a life of decency and prosperity for our
people.
Above all, this mission requires the support of our people. No program can
succeed without popular sustenance. We shall need that faith and that support
demonstrated by our people in our election against appalling odds.
The beneficent effects of some of the concrete steps that we shall take may not be
immediately evident; what may, in fact, be instantly visible will be adverse but transitory
repercussions that in time will clear the way for the final and favorable outcome. In
those interludes of anxiety, we shall need the full trust and confidence of our people,
and we assure now that we shall deserve that trust and confidence because in all our
actions we shall never deviate from the course of integrity, sincerity, and devotion to
the welfare of the Nation.
In the past electoral combat, our people showed the strength of our democracy in
this part of the world by bringing about a peaceful change of Administration through
9
the ballot and not through the bullet. Simultaneously, democracy displayed its
splendor by showing that under its aegis a poor man who sprang from the humblest
origin and who has not attained a state of riches can rise to the Presidency of the
Republic. I, whom the sovereign will in a democracy has chosen as the means for the
exhibition of the reality of its virtue of offering equal opportunity to the rich and the
poor alike, am now called upon to prove that such a gift of opportunity to our humble
citizenry shall not be in vain. With God’s grace and the supp ort of all citizens of good
will and good faith, and of our common people in particular, I pray with all my heart
and soul that I shall not fail in my trust.
II. Pair Activity. Form pairs. Then, look for television news program transcripts which are
available online. Some of the online transcript providers are shown below.
• ABC News: http://www.abc.net.au/news/programs/transcripts/
• BBC: http://www.bbc.co.uk/faqs/radio/radio_transcript
• CNN: http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/
With your partner, deliver a three-minute manuscript speech using one transcript that you
selected. Perform like newscasters do. To give you ideas, watch your favorite local or
international news programs and observe how newscasters deliver their prompts. Both of you
should have speaking lines.
III. Group Activity. Group yourselves into five members each. Your teacher will assign you one line
from the following list.
• Certain things catch your eye, but pursue only those that capture the heart. (Ancient Indian Proverb)
• He who asks is a fool for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever. (Chinese
proverb)
• Our greatest glory is not in never failing, but in rising up every time we fail. (Ralph Waldo Emerson)
• In order to succeed, we must first believe that we can. (Nikos Kazantzakis)
• By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail. (Benjamin Franklin)
• There is no passion to be found playing small—in settling for a life that is less than the one you
are capable of living. (Nelson Mandela)
• People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget
how you made them feel. (Maya Angelou)
• Too many of us are not living our dreams because we are living our fears. (Les Brown)
• I am not a product of my circumstances. I am a product of my decisions. (Stephen Covey)
• Build your own dreams, or someone else will hire you to build theirs. (Farrah Gray)
IV. Individual Activity.In 300 to 500 words, write a short persuasive speech about any of the topics
in the box below. Make sure you have an introduction, body, and conclusion. Be prepared to
deliver your speech in class.
1. Before the speech presentations, find a partner who will evaluate your speech, and vice-
versa. Use the rubrics on page 106 as basis for your evaluation.
2. Submit two versions of your speech to your teacher: the clean copy and the marked copy.
Use the following formats for the speeches you will submit.
• Clean copy: short bond paper, double-spaced, font size 12, font style Times New Roman
• Marked copy: short bond paper, triple-spaced, font size 12, font style Times New Roman,
with markings
You may pick any of the following topics. You are free to agree or disagree with the topic, as
long as you present your arguments persuasively.
List of Topics for a Persuasive Speech
•Lying is always wrong.
•Truth is never debatable.
•Modern media is to blame for lowering moral standards, reading levels or escalating violence.
•Online games can be good for you.
•Disabilities of any sort are an opportunity for personal growth.
•Internet chat rooms are evil.
• Facebook (or any other form of social media) is replacing the need for face to
face communication.
• Cyberbullying controls
• There is never an excuse or reason good enough to declare war.
• Money is not the root of all evil.
• Power does not necessarily corrupt.
• Healthcare is the responsibility of the individual, not the state.
• Homelessness is the result of choice.
• Winning at all costs is not right.
• Becoming a parent should be an earned privilege.
• Gay marriage is acceptable.
• Being ‘green’ is fashionable.
• Religion has no place in government.
• Choices of clothing reflect who you are.
• Global warming is real.
• Being a good person is learned.
• What is ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ changes from generation to generation.
• Having chores/a pet/ an after-school job teaches responsibility.
• Food engineering is the way of the future.
• ‘Normal’ depends on your environment.
• Culture is essential, just like fresh air and food.
• Equality is a myth.
• We are what we eat.
• What we think, we are.
• Plastic surgery should be only for those who really need it.
• Higher education is over-rated.
• Monitoring media of any sort should be banned.
• Women should stay in the home to look after their families properly.
• The idea of peace on earth is naive.
• Freedom of speech is a fallacy.
• Nationalism creates enemies.
• Cultural differences should be celebrated.
• Designer children—is this good for future generations?
• All education should be free.
• Conformity cripples creativity.
• Cloning is justifiable.
• Poverty begins in the mind.
• Divorce damages children.
• Juvenile crime is a cry for help.
• Gangs are the result of family breakdown.
• Children raised by single parents are disadvantaged.
• Boys/girls need father figures to grow into mature adults.
• Being politically correct encourages masking our real feelings.
• Graffiti is art.
Rubric for Manuscript Speech Evaluation
VGE GE SE LE N
Category Scoring Criteria
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
Ideas are arranged logically.
Organization Appropriate organizational pattern is observed.
Transitions are smooth.
Topic is relevant and well-developed.
Purpose is well-defined.
Main points are stated clearly.
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 93–115; GE – 70–92; SE – 47–69; LE – 24–46; N – 23
Reinforcement Activity
Speech making and delivery are painstaking tasks. They require a great deal of
practice and motivation. In the film, The King’s Speech, therapist Lionel Logue helps
encourage the nervous king before he begins, saying, “Forget everything else and just say
it to me—say it to me, as a friend.”
Below is the link to the video of the final scene of the movie The King’s Speech. Watch the
video and do the task that follows.
• If you were a speech therapist and you have to encourage an anxious speaker, what advice
will you give him/her? Using a minimum of 250 words, write a letter addressed to your
student stating your piece of advice that will help him/her feel more confident about
delivering a manuscript speech effectively.
Use the following format: computerized, font size 12, font style Times New Roman.
• Make sure that your letter has the following parts: date, salutation, body, complimentary
close, and signature. Research online for various letter formats you may use.
E-link
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart
below.
I thought…
hat were your thoughts or ideas about the manuscript speech prior to
discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
at new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
Lesson 2
Organizing and Delivering a
Memorized Speech
Let’s Warm Up
109
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
110
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2016.
Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Individual)
Think of a song that you have memorized by heart. This song may have created a
great impact on you and inspired you to see life positively or helped you get up after a
failure. Choose a stanza, chorus, or refrain— whatever is most important to you.
Deliver the lines in class as if they were part of a speech. Make sure to vary the
volume, rate, and pitch of your voice when delivering the excerpt. Focus on appropriate
facial expressions and gestures during the delivery.
Key Takeaways
A memorized speech requires you to commit the speech to memory so that you do not bring
your notes when delivering it. As with the manuscript speech, you also run the risk of sounding
mechanical during a memorized delivery. For this reason, keep your memorized speech short and
work harder on your facial expressions and the tone of your voice.
111
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2016.
3. You can concentrate on visual aids and props. A memorized speech will help you focus more on
your props if you have any.
4. You will feel more confident. If you know that you have committed the speech to memory, you
will not be anxious about running out of words or not knowing what to say.
1. Break it down! You cannot memorize a speech in one sitting. If your speech has four
paragraphs, you should focus on one paragraph at a time. Once you have memorized the first
paragraph, focus on the next one.
2. Build it up! After memorizing the speech in snippets, you need to put them together. Recite the
first paragraph and move on to the second. After this, recite the first and second paragraphs and
move on to the third. The next thing you know, you have completed your speech.
3. Speak out! Do not memorize the speech silently. When you recite your speech over and over
while memorizing it, your brain multitasks and aids your memory retention.
4. Identify keys! Identify a key point in every paragraph. Even if you miss out some of the words
in the actual speech delivery, you can easily expound on the key points.
5. Have a break! After memorizing some parts of your speech, take a break for some hours or
for a day. After this, recite the speech again. This will test how well you can recall what you
think you have memorized.
6. Record and listen! Record yourself delivering the speech and listen to it over and over again. Like
a song, the speech will get stuck in your head.
7. Use note cards! Write one key point on one note card. Bring these note cards wherever you go
and take them out whenever you have extra time to memorize, especially during idle times of the
day.
Exercise II
Identify if the following are good or bad topics for a memorized speech. Write G for
good and B for bad before each topic.
112
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Let’s Practice
I. Group Activity. Work in groups of five. Below are links to the videos of different acceptance
speeches delivered during various awarding ceremonies. Imagine that you are judges of a Best
Acceptance Speech Award. Choose the best acceptance speech among the three and discuss the
reasons for your decision. The group member with an incoming birthday closest to the current
date will share your group’s insights and justification to your decision.
• Halle Berry (Oscars, 2002)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=llgL7mGYVTI
• Charlize Theron (Oscars, 2004)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v70pNFdsBSg
• Sandra Bullock (Oscars, 2010)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-hTTwSQPmMo
II. Individual Activity.Speeches for special occasions are a perfect fit for a memorized speech
because they are short and simple. Now, choose any of the following occasions and write a five-
sentence speech that you will deliver in class.
1. Introducing a person
2. Giving a toast during a wedding
3. Presenting an award
4. Accepting an award
5. Giving tribute to a person, place, or event
Before the speech delivery, find a partner who will evaluate your speech and whom you will
evaluate as well. Refer to the rubric on page 114 as a basis for your evaluation.
Remember the following tips.
1. Keep the speech brief.
2. Observe the speech writing process.
3. Research on words, names, dates, and titles to be used in the speech, so that you choose only
the most accurate ones.
4. Give a short introduction as some members of the audience may not know a lot about the
occasion.
5. Memorize the speech so that you can focus on maintaining eye contact, facial expressions,
gestures, and voice expression.
Rubric for Memorized Speech
VGE GE SE LE N
Category Scoring Criteria
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
Ideas are arranged logically.
Organization Appropriate organizational pattern is observed.
Transitions are smooth.
Topic is relevant and well-developed.
Purpose is well-defined.
Main points are stated clearly.
Below is a link to the video of the best man’s speech by Hugh Grant in the movie Four
Weddings and a Funeral. In an essay of 300 to 500 words, write about what makes the
speech effective. What techniques did the speaker use which you were also able to apply
in your memorized speech delivery? Write about other techniques that you plan to
emulate the next time you deliver a memorized speech.
Follow the following format when writing your essay: computerized, double-spaced,
font size 12, font style Times New Roman.
E-link
Hone your skills in delivering a memorized speech by checking the exercises found in
the following websites.
Memorized Speech Exercises
Q http://www.longleaf.net/ggrow/Skspre/Actor.html
Oral Presentation Exercises
Q http://www.eflsensei.com/?category=29
Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart
below.
I thought…
What were your thoughts or ideas about memorized speech prior to
the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
What new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
115
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Lesson 3
Organizing and Delivering an
Impromptu Speech
Let’s Warm Up
1. Think of one thing that makes you happy. Write it on a 1/4 sheet of paper.
2. Fold the paper and submit it to your teacher. Your teacher will collect all the folded
pieces of paper and place them in a box.
3. Your teacher will call a volunteer to pick a piece of paper. He/she will then be given
one minute to say something about the word or phrase on that paper.
4. Everyone in class will be given the opportunity to speak in front.
116
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
117
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Pair)
Write T before each number if the statement is true and F if the statement is false.
1. After your speech, it is appropriate to say “Thank you” to the organizer for the
speaking opportunity.
2. If you find the topic uninteresting, you say, “I don’t think the topic is stimulating
enough. I don’t like to say something about it.”
3. Impromptu is definitely different from other forms of speeches.
4. Impromptu speaking challenges the speaker’s ability to organize ideas and deliver
effectively in a very short period.
5. One way to relax is to over-think.
6. Saying sorry because you did not prepare is appropriate in an impromptu speech.
7. In an impromptu speech, there is no need for nonverbal cues.
8. There are strategies that can help in verbalizing thoughts.
9. Warming up before the speech can ease your tensed nerves.
10. In impromptu speaking, your audiences don’t care about your transitions anymore.
Key Takeaways
Impromptu speeches are delivered with little or no time for preparation. In most instances,
you are called to speak at the spur of the moment because you are expected to be knowledgeable
about the subject.
For example, your teacher assigned you to read an article before the class starts. Then, during
the class you were asked to deliver an impromptu speech about what you have learned from the
article. Another instance to illustrate an impromptu situation is when you are asked by a friend or
a relative about your current or planned vacation trip or when you are campaigning for a position
in school and you are asked by your fellow students to respond to their questions.
118
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2016.
2. Point-Reason-Example/Explanation-Point
Example:
I have two reasons for this: one, it helps me easily reconnect with old friends;
Reason
and, two, I am updated on the happenings around me.
Point Facebook, indeed, is a useful social network site. That is why I love it.
Every time I see homeless families, it breaks my heart. That is why I try to do
Opening
at least three little things to help them.
• First, I feature them in my writings which I submit to editors for
publication. I highlight their sad and bad experiences living in the streets
and their dreams and aspirations in life.
• Second, I actively participate in organizing and facilitating livelihood
Rule of Three programs for these families.
• Finally, I join different nonprofit organizations in campaigns
and awareness activities against poverty.
In some cases, you may find yourself unaware of or uninterested in the topic. This usually
happens and it is inevitable. Distinguished Toastmaster Craig Harrison (2010) shares the
following strategies that can help you address the problem.
a. Bridging. This entails building a connection between what you do know and what you
do not know.
Example:
Topic You are asked about your reaction on the conflict in Russia.
You have no knowledge about the existing conflict in Russia because you
Problem
do not follow it.
Solution Find a way to bridge what you don’t know and what you do know.
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b. Reframing. This means rephrasing or redefining the topic into something that you
want to talk about. This usually occurs if you think the topic is inappropriate or it is not
meant for you.
If you are given a topic that you do not like or is not right for you, don’t despair. Simply
reframe it as a topic you’d like to respond to. Redefine the topic as you believe it should
be, or at least the way you’d like it to be. Keep the structure but alter the subject.
Rephrase the question or even challenge it; you can even argue why the question given is
not the right question at all.
Example:
Problem You think that it is not right for you because you are a science major.
Find a pair of anything that you think is worth comparing. You can
Solution compare natural science and social science in terms of concepts and
processes, or computers and humans in terms of capacity and
efficiency.
“This question reminds me of the complexities in differentiating two
concepts in science. These are natural science and social science. Just like
Response
democractic and parliamentary, these two differ in terms of concepts and
processes…”
c. Playing Devil’s Advocate. This refers to you standing on the opposite side.
Example:
You are asked whether or not the government should allocate a bigger
Topic
budget for national defense.
You have no idea about the defense system and you are more
Problem
knowledgeable with education.
1.Smile.
2.Relax by thinking about positive things. Keep telling yourself, “I am a
brilliant speaker. I will nail this presentation.”
3.Identify your purpose. Is it to inform, to entertain, to welcome, to
Before the Speech congratulate, to apologize, or to give birthday greetings?
4.Think of one big word that can serve as your main point. If you think you
have enough, think of the rule of three.
5.Start outlining in your head. Focus on what to say first. Be reminded that your
first few words are crucial, so make them strong, powerful and catchy.
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Some Useful Tips in Effective Impromptu Speech Delivery
1.When you are called, keep composed. Walk slowly to the lectern or the
center stage.
2.Shake hands with the one who introduced you, if necessary.
3.As you stand to deliver, establish eye contact, and begin right away with
During the Speech your opening statements. Part of your opening is greeting your
audience.
4.From your initial idea to the next, use appropriate transitional devices. 5.
Observe appropriate and effective nonverbal cues.
6. Observe time limit. Remember, you barely have five minutes to say
something.
1.Say thank you.
After the Speech
2.Return to your place comfortably.
Exercise II (Pair)
Think of at least five impromptu speech situations and list the preparations you should
make to succeed.
2.
3.
4.
5.
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Let’s Practice
I. Individual Activity. On a ¼ sheet of paper, write the name of one local or international
personality. Make sure that the personality is still alive. Examples can be world leaders, scholars,
show hosts, writers, educators, medical practitioners, lawyers, fashion designers, and others.
Fold the paper. Your teacher will provide a box where you have to drop your folded piece of
paper. Now, read the following situation.
Your dean assigns you to represent your school in a summit. There, you meet a local or
international personality. You realized that you had the perfect opportunity to talk to that
person. What would you say?
Pick a name from the box and address the question above in front of your classmates. Make
sure you apply the strategies learned from this lesson. You have two minutes to prepare and two
minutes to speak. Your teacher will signal once you have reached the time limit.
II. Individual Activity. Watch the 2015 promotional video of the Department of Tourism through
the following link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXxA5IlHK0Q.
Imagine that you are a tourism officer assigned to promote the Philippines among a group of
foreign nationals. Using one strategy learned from this lesson, deliver a two-minute speech
focusing on one Philippine destination.
Your teacher will prepare a box of destinations. You will be prompted to pick a piece of paper
from the box two minutes before your speech. You have two minutes to prepare and two minutes
to speak.
III. Individual Activity. Your teacher will prepare a list of essential skills a 21st century Filipino
learner should have, such as critical thinking, problem solving, effective communication and
collaboration, and innovation.
These skills will be written on small pieces of paper, placed in a box, and then shuffled by
your teacher. Once your name is called, go to the front of the class, pick a word, identify one
person in class, and explain why he/she should win the Nobel prize for the skill you picked.
You have two minutes to prepare and two minutes to present. Your teacher will signal once you
have reached the time limit.
IV. Class-Individual Activity. The following can be a major task for an impromptu activity. As a
class, choose one activity and decide on the order of presentation (voluntary, alphabetical order,
or teacher’s choice).
1. Traditional Style. Each one will prepare three basic questions relevant to various social
issues and fields of study, such as global awareness, civic literacy, political system, health,
education, governance, business, sciences, technology and communications, engineering,
law, and gender.
Each question will be written clearly on a one-fourth sheet of paper, which will be submitted
to your teacher. Once given, your teacher will put these sheets in a fish bowl or box and
shuffle them.
If it’s your turn to speak, pick a paper. You have two minutes to prepare and two minutes to
speak. Your teacher will signal once you have reached the time limit.
2. Photo Prompts. Your teacher will prepare pictures reflecting current events. Each picture
may be placed in a PowerPoint Presentation slide or pasted on a bond paper.
Once it’s your turn to speak, your teacher will show you a picture. You have two minutes to
prepare and two minutes to speak. Your teacher will signal once you have reached the time
limit.
3. Box of Surprises. Your teacher will prepare a big box and will request each of you to put
in one object found inside your bag.
Once it’s your turn to speak, pick one item from the box without looking. You have two
minutes to prepare and two minutes to speak. Your teacher will signal once you have
reached the time limit.
V. Individual Activity. You will be assigned to critique the impromptu speech presentations of two
or three of your classmates using the following sheet and rubric.
Speaker 1
Things that I like about his/her performance: Things that need to be improved:
1. 1.
2. 2.
3. 3.
Speaker 2
Things that I like about his/her performance: Things that need to be improved:
1. 1.
2. 2.
3. 3.
Speaker 3
Things that I like about his/her performance: Things that need to be improved:
1. 1.
2. 2.
3. 3.
Rubric for Evaluating an Impromptu Speech
VGE GE SE LE N
Category Scoring Criteria
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
Ideas are arranged logically.
Organization Appropriate organizational pattern is observed.
Transitions are smooth.
Topic is relevant and well-developed.
Purpose is well-defined.
Main points are stated clearly.
Content Arguments are sound and supported with valid and
credible sources.
Introduction captures listener’s attention.
Speech is ended effectively with a review of the main
points.
Speech is not delivered in a monotone voice; voice is
modulated.
Fillers are avoided.
Volume is well-adjusted to audience size.
Rate or speed of speaking is varied.
Verbal
Audible and pleasant voice is used.
Pauses are effectively used.
Words are pronounced and enunciated well.
Eye contact is established and maintained.
Speaker is prepared and confident.
Distracting movements or mannerisms are avoided.
Facial expressions are appropriate to the message.
Non-verbal Gestures, posture, and facial expressions are
expressive, dynamic, and natural.
Attire is appropriate.
Mastery of the speech is evident.
TOTAL
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 93–115; GE – 70–92; SE – 47–69; LE – 24–46; N – 23
Reinforcement Activity
E-link
Hone your skills in delivering an impromptu speech by checking the websites below.
Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart
below.
I thought…
I learned that…
at new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
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Lesson 4
Organizing and Delivering an
Extemporaneous Speech
By the end of the lesson, you will have been able to
⌂ identify the features of an extemporaneous speech;
⌂ write topics appropriate for an extemporaneous speech;
⌂ develop and deliver an effective extemporaneous speech;
⌂ evaluate and critique an extemporaneous speech;
⌂ apply learning and thinking skills, life skills, and ICT literacy in organizing and delivering an
extemporaneous speech; and
⌂ reflect on your learning on organizing and delivering an extemporaneous speech.
Let’s Warm Up
1. Group yourselves into five members each. Consider yourselves youth ambassadors who
are invited to the Malacañang Palace. Your goal is to convince the President to act on
pressing social issues in the country.
2. Talk about a social issue in the Philippines that has to be addressed by the
government as soon as possible.
3. Imagine that you have a Powerpoint presentation to go along with your speech, and
that the pictures or slides are projected on the blackboard or a blank wall in your
classroom. Discuss each picture or slide as if everyone could see it as well.
4. Each member should take part in the presentation. You have 10 minutes to prepare.
5. Here is a sample transcript of a presentation:
Good day! We are here to talk about the problem of human trafficking in the
Philippines. As you can see in our first slide (imaginary slide), the Philippines is among the
Asian countries which is involved in drug syndicates all over the world…
The second slide is a photo of Mary Jane Veloso after her arrest. You can see how painful
it has been for her…
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Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
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Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Individual)
On a ¼ sheet of paper, write a problematic situation that people may encounter on any day.
Sample situation: You were walking alone on the street when a man suddenly put his arms around you
and demanded that you give him your valuables.
Your teacher will ask you to put these pieces of paper in a box.
Pick a piece of paper, read the problem and outline your ideas. Then, discuss in two-
three minutes how the problem can be possibly handled or solved. Make sure you do not
get the problem you wrote.
Key Takeaways
• Is it a question of value?
It is centered on whether a topic is good or bad, moral or immoral, just or unjust.
Example:
Q Is it better for the European nations to step in and aid Syria or ignore the country’s
civil crisis?
• Is it a question of policy?
It is focused on what policy or rule should be followed.
Example:
Q Should European countries enforce laws to accommodate Syrian refugees?
2. Determine the purpose appropriate to your topic.
3. Stick to your topic and look at all of the sides and angles of the problem.
1. Reinforce! You may explore other main points, but always refer back to your thesis. This will
greatly help your audience remember your message.
2. Capture! State the central idea of your extemporaneous speech in one declarative sentence. Keep
your sentence specific. Ask yourself what you want your audience to know exactly.
3. Develop! Now that you have a clear central idea, you are ready to map out the supporting points
in an outline.
4. Introduce! In the introduction, make sure you:
• grab the attention of the audience with a striking one-liner.
• give a short background by explaining why they have to listen.
• state your thesis.
5. Check! Develop at least three main points and check each of them with these questions:
• Does each point have one single idea?
• Does each point reiterate the thesis statement?
• Does each point prepare the discussion of the next main point?
6. Supply! Make sure that each main point has enough examples, testimonies, statistics, or cases. In
doing this, you give the audience new information or views to learn from.
7. Conclude! Reinforce your introduction by coming up with a closing attention-getter that is
related to your opening. Connect the needs and interest of your audience with the theme of your
speech. Restate your thesis or review your main points.
Exercise II (Pair)
Tell if each of the extemporaneous topics below is a thesis statement to a question of
fact (F), question of value (V) or a question of policy (P). Write the letter that corresponds
to your answer before each number.
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Let’s Practice
A ship is sinking and only one lifeboat is available. There are seven (7) passengers left,
but the lifeboat can only accommodate six (6). You have to decide who among the following
passengers you will save:
1. a ten-month-old baby
2. a sixty-five-year-old woman (the sole relative of the baby)
3. a pregnant woman suspected to be a prostitute
4. a twelve-year-old boy with a 140+ IQ
5. an athlete who advocates for LGBT rights
6. a doctor who may find a cure for lung cancer but is a drug addict
7. the captain of the ship
Justify your decision. Choose one representative who will share your decision and the
justification with the rest of the class.
II. Individual Activity.Think of a social issue that you can discuss in a five-minute extemporaneous
speech. After your teacher approves your topic, prepare an outline for your speech using the
format discussed in the Key Takeaways. Then, prepare to deliver your extemporaneous speech
in class.
Before the speech delivery, find a partner who will evaluate your speech and vice versa. Use
the rubrics on page 132 as a basis for your evaluation.
Topic:
Introduction
Body
1.
2.
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1.
2.
Conclusion
Purpose is well-defined.
TOTAL
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 93–115; GE – 70–92; SE – 47–69; LE – 24–46; N – 23
Reinforcement Activity
Below is a link to the speech of Carl Aquino, Class 2010 Valedictorian of West Hall
High School in the USA. Watch the video and in an essay of not less than 500 words
(computerized, double-spaced, font size 12, font style Times New Roman) identify the
problems that students face in high school and the solutions to these as shared by the
speaker. Lastly, discuss strategies and techniques which the speaker used to make his
speech more attention-getting.
E-link
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart
below.
I thought…
oughts or ideas about an extemporaneous speech prior to the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
at new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
Lesson 5
Organizing and Delivering an
Entertainment Speech
Let’s Warm Up
1. Find a partner.
2. Take turns sharing your scariest experience, paranormal or not.
3. Jot down notes while you carefully listen to your partner. Be sure to give your full
attention to the storytelling.
4. Clarify unclear points after your partner is done telling his/her story.
5. Share your partner’s scariest experience to the class within two minutes.
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Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
136
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Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Class-Pair)
1. As a class, watch Marianna Pascal’s Speech: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9u2
BtGHa_0Y
2. Work with a partner and answer the following questions. You have three minutes to
discuss the answers with your partner.
• Does the speech catch the attention of the audience?
• Does the speech amuse or entertain the audience while the message is delivered? If yes, why
do you say so? What are the factors that make the speech amusing or entertaining?
• What parts comprise the speech?
• What is the message of the speech?
• What are the interesting points or ideas that support the message of the speech?
3. Share your answers with the class.
Key Takeaways
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2016.
4. Visualize! Your words should be highly descriptive. Use vivid words and keep them flowing to
make your audience feel as if they were in your story.
5. Surprise! Astonish your audience with unexpected twists in your presentation. The more you
surprise them, the more entertaining your speech will become.
Suggested Outline
1. Introduction
1.1 Open with an anecdote or funny story which captures the interest of the audience.
2.1 Talk about the series of events that made you think of your main message.
3.1 Recall the main points you talked about in your speech.
Exercise II (Pair)
Watch one of the three videos below.
1. Introduction
1.1
1.2
1.3
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2. Body
2.1
2.2
2.3
3. Conclusion
3.1
3.2
3.3
Let’s Practice
I. Group Activity. Group yourselves into five members each and assign a leader. The goal of the
activity is for your group to come up with a story. Each person tells a part of the story and leaves
it hanging for the next person to add to.
• First, set the topic. To facilitate this, the leader will ask who, what, when, where, why, and
how questions. Then, assign someone to start the story. Use descriptive words and keep the
action clear. Your story can be funny, dramatic, or scary.
• The leader builds the action to where something is about to happen and then stops. He/she
must pick the next person in the group to continue the story. The second person continues
and stops again when something is about to happen.
• This continues on until your group is ready to end the story. The last person to add to the
story decides how it should end.
• Ask the most animated member to share your group’s story with the class.
II. Group Activity. Work with your group mates from the previous activity. Below are the links to
the entertaining performances of GB Labrador, Eri Neeman, Victor Anastacio, and Alex Calleja.
As a group, identify three qualities that these speakers have in common and three techniques
that they all employed in their speeches. Assign a speaker who will share your insights with the
class.
• GB Labrador
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krx5oFdmnRE
• Eri Neeman
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DBJRQ-yYfA
• Victor Anastacio
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rp_NIoK_i0M
• Alex Calleja
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Pdaxz5yWQo
III. Individual Activity. Develop a five-minute entertainment speech. After your teacher approves
your topic, prepare an outline for your speech using the format below.
Topic:
1. Introduction
1.1
1.2
1.3
2. Body
2.1
2.2
2.3
140
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3. Conclusion
3.1
3.2
3.3
IV. Pair Activity. Find a partner. Evaluate his speech delivery using the following rubric as your guide.
Purpose is well-defined.
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VGE GE SE LE N
Category Scoring Criteria
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
Attire is appropriate.
TOTAL
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 93–115; GE – 70–92; SE – 47–69; LE – 24–46; N – 23
Reinforcement Activity
Below is a link to the video of Ellen DeGeneres’ commencement speech at Tulane
University. Watch the video and find out how Ellen DeGeneres’ speech is similar with or
different from Steve Job’s commencement speech at Stanford University.
Using a minimum of 500 words, write an essay about your comparison. Use the
following format: computerized, double-spaced, font size 12, Times New Roman.
Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart
below.
I thought…
What were your thoughts or ideas about an entertainment speech prior to the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
What new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
Lesson 6
Organizing and Delivering an
Informative Speech
Let’s Warm Up
1. Prepare three pieces of ¼-sized paper. On each sheet, write a topic you are deeply
interested in and knowledgeable about. It could be a hobby, a band, or a movie.
2. When you are called by your teacher, ask your seatmate to pick one from the three
pieces of paper you have.
3. Once a topic is chosen, you will be given one minute to introduce it to the class. Make
sure to incorporate facts and supporting information when talking about the topic.
144
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Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
145
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Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Class-Pair)
As a class, watch the speech titled, “My Philosophy of a Happy Life” delivered by Sam
Berns on TedTalks through the following link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36m1o-
tM05g
After watching the video, find a partner. Read the following questions based on the
video you just watched, and then choose the letter that corresponds to your answer.
Key Takeaways
Generally, there are four types of informative speeches which vary depending on the topic.
These are speech about objects or people, speech about processes, speech about events, and speech
about concepts.
An informative speech can follow different patterns of organization to arrange and frame the
details effectively.
A. Chronological Pattern. This can be used if you want to present the history, evolution, or
development of your topic in a sequential order, from past to present or beginning to end.
1. Introduction
1.1 Attention getter
9/11 Attacks Type:Speech about events 1.2 Thesis Statement/Main Point 2.
pose: To inform my audience about one of the greatest tragedies
Body in the 21st century.
ment: The 9/11 attacks were unforeseen and have changed the world forever.
2.1 Step A, Year A, First
2.2 Step B, Year B, Second
tter: One of the most recent tragedies that the world has seen
2.3happened on C,
Step C, Year what was supposed to be a typical September day in 2001.
Third
ment: The 9/11 attacks were unforeseen and have changed the world forever.
2.4 Step D, Year D, Fourth or Finally
3. Conclusion
were planned by the terrorist organization as an act of retaliation to the United States of America.
litants associated with the Islamist extremist group known as Al- Qaeda
3.1 Summarywereofinvolved in the attacks.
the Points
acks were reported to be financed by Osama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda terrorist organization as an act of revenge for the involvement of America in various issues in Israel
3.2 Memorable Statement
B. Spatial Pattern – this pattern is used when you want to talk about the physical structure of
an object or the way things fit together in a certain space (Glendale Community College;
University of Washington Tacoma). Topics that deal with geography fit this pattern best.
Below is an example of a speech outline following a spatial pattern.
ech about a place
urpose: To inform tourists about the beauty and mysticism of the Mayon Volcano, while at the same time recognizing the threat that it is very active and can erupt any
yon Vocano’s beauty and mysticism belies the fact that it is very active and lies along the Pacific Ring of Fire.
on
Mayon Volcano rises 2,462 meters above the Gulf of Albay in Bicol Region with an almost perfect cone. Legend has it that the volcano was formed from the grave of
vers.
cano’s beauty and mysticism belies the fact that it is very active and lies along the Pacific Ring of Fire.
lcano is the highest point in Albay province in Bicol and can be viewed from eight municipalities and cities in the region. It is a perfect stratovolcano that is part of the
ctive, having recorded a total of 49 eruptions in the last 400 years. The most violent eruption, which happened in 1814, buried the town of Cagsawa.
e dangers posed by Mayon, people still prefer to live in the surrounding areas.
enefit from the bountiful harvest of crops because of the fertile soil.
Conclusion
Mayon Volcano is a beautiful volcano which has a past of dangerous eruptions. 3.2 It is indeed a wondrous combination of beauty
C. Topical/Categorical Pattern. This can be used if you want to inform your audience about
the main features, descriptions, or categories of your topic.
Below is an example of an outline following a topical/categorical pattern.
1. Introduction
1.1 Attention getter
1.2 Thesis Statement/Main Point 2.
Body
2.1 Feature A, Description A, First Category
2.2 Feature B, Description B, Second Category
2.3 Feature C, Description C, Third Category
2.4 Feature D, Description D, Fourth or Final Category
3. Conclusion
3.1 Summary of the Points
3.2 Memorable Statement
1. Introduction
1.1 Disagreement of scholars on the development concept
1.2 Theoretical approaches to development
2. Body
2.1 Modernization and Green Revolution
2.2 Integrated Rural Development
2.3 Participatory Development
2.4 Sustainable Development
2.5 Millennium Development
3. Conclusion
3.1 Development as a complex concept
3.2 Development as a discourse
D. Cause-Effect Pattern. This can be used if you want to show the causal relationship of events
or phenomena.
Your outline may follow different patterns of organization depending on the relationship
between the causes and effects of the event.
150
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Single Cause-Multiple Effects Single Effect-Multiple Causes
1. Introduction 1. Introduction
1.1 Attention getter 1.1 Attention getter
1.2 Thesis Statement/Main Point highlighting 1.2 Thesis Statement/Main Point highlighting
the cause of an event or phenomenon the effect of an event or phenomenon
2. Body 2. Body
2.1 Effect A 2.1 Cause A
2.2 Effect B 2.2 Cause B
2.3 Effect C 2.3 Cause C
2.4 Effect D 2.4 Cause D
3. Conclusion 3. Conclusion
3.1 Summary of the Points 3.1 Summary of the Points
3.2 Memorable Statement 3.2 Memorable Statement
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E. Comparison-Contrast. This can be used if you want to compare objects, events, or
concepts underscoring their similarities and differences.
Your outline may follow either a block or point-by-point format.
Block Point-by-point
1. Introduction 1. Introduction
1.1 Attention getter 1.1 Attention getter
1.2 Thesis Statement/Main Point 1.2 Thesis Statement/Main Point
highlighting the concepts compared highlighting the concepts compared
2. Body 2. Body
2.1 Object/Event/Concept A 2.1 Comparison Point A
2.1.1 Comparison Point A 2.1.1 Object/Event/Concept A
2.1.2 Comparison Point B 2.1.2 Object/Event/Concept B
2.1.3 Comparison Point C 2.1 Comparison Point B
2.2 Object/Event/Concept B 2.1.1 Object/Event/Concept A
2.2.1 Comparison Point A 2.1.2 Object/Event/Concept B
2.2.2 Comparison Point B 2.1 Comparison Point C
2.2.3 Comparison Point C 2.1.1 Object/Event/Concept A
3. Conclusion 2.1.2 Object/Event/Concept B
3.1 Summary of the Points 3. Conclusion
3.2 Memorable Statement 3.1 Summary of the Points
3.2 Memorable Statement
Exercise II (Pair)
Work in pairs. Choose two out of the ten topics given below. Then, identify the
suitable type of informative speech, as well as an appropriate pattern of organization for
the speech. Write the purpose and thesis statement as well.
I. Individual Activity.Choose a topic that interests you. Then, prepare a two- to three-minute
informative speech whose specific aim is to demonstrate the process of doing something.
Below are some sample topics to guide you.
• How to design clothes
• What to do on a first date
• How to tone muscles
• How to dribble a ball effectively
II. Individual Activity.Think about one new concept or idea you learned from your other class or
from your readings. Using it as your topic, prepare a two- to three-minute informative speech in
which the specific aim is to give your audience interesting information related to that concept
or idea.
III. Individual Activity. From the topics in Exercise II, choose one that you want to develop and
deliver as your five- to seven-minute informative speech.
Alternatively, you can choose another topic that you are interested to talk about. Make sure to
confer with your teacher to receive his/her feedback and approval.
This is a major activity, so make sure to set a preparation time which your teacher will approve.
In your preparation, consider the following.
1. Preliminary outline
2. Final outline
3. Initial draft of the speech
4. Final draft of the speech
5. Visual aids of the speech
6. Feedback from your classmates and teacher
7. Well-rehearsed presentation
IV. Individual Activity. Find a partner. Evaluate his/her informative speech presentation by using
the following performance rubric as your guide:
VGE GE SE LE N
Category Scoring Criteria
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
Purpose is well-defined.
TOTAL
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little extent;
N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 93–115; GE – 70–92; SE – 47–69; LE – 24–46; N – 23
Reinforcement Activity
E-link
Hone your knowledge in delivering an informative speech by checking the following websites.
Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart below.
I thought…
I learned that…
hat new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
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Lesson 7
Organizing and Delivering a
Persuasive Speech
Let’s Warm Up
1. The class will be divided into five groups. Read the following scenario.
Five famous world personalities are in a hot air balloon. The balloon is quickly losing
heat, and only one safety parachute is available to save a person.
2. With your group mates, think of a famous personality from any field or discipline who
you think contributed much to the world. Then, think of various reasons why your
chosen personality has to receive the parachute.
3. Choose a representative who will assume the persona of your chosen personality. All
representatives will stand in front of the class.
4. They then have to present their arguments. Based on the arguments, the teacher will
choose who will get the parachute.
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Self-audit
After completing Let’s Warm Up, tick the column that determines how often you
practice what the statements say. Do this as objectively as possible. Bear in mind that
there are no wrong answers. You can use your performance in Let’s Warm Up as a basis in
completing this task.
TOTAL
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Let’s Work and Learn
Exercise I (Individual)
Tick the column that corresponds to your response.
True False
1. There is one best type of persuasive speaking.
3. Your ultimate goal as a persuasive speaker is to convince your audience to believe in you.
6. There are various organizational patterns that can be observed in persuasive speaking.
Key Takeaways
Persuasive speaking is the form of communication that people of diverse backgrounds mostly
engage in. This kind of speech can center on any arguably interesting topic under the sun. When you
deliver your persuasive speech, your primary goal is to influence the thoughts, feelings, actions, and
behaviors or attitudes of your listeners (Gamble & Gamble, 2012). Likewise, you also aim to change
their perception and convince them that your argument is more important, practical, attainable, or
feasible. In essence, you—as a persuasive speaker—advocate for whatever your message is.
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2016.
2. Speech that Questions Value
This type focuses on questions of value regarding topics on the self, family, friendship,
religion, government, freedom, love, and money, among others. In this case, the persuasive
speaker (1) makes a statement or claim which reflects his/her judgment, (2) attempts to
convince his/her audience of his/her judgment, and (3) justifies it based on standards.
Below are a sample argument and a sample outline.
Argument: Sentencing criminals to death is wrong.
A. Purpose: To persuade listeners that the death penalty should not be revived by the
government.
B. Main Point: The government should not revive death penalty as it does not directly
decrease the crime rate.
C. Supporting Idea: In the United States, it was found that states with no death penalty
have lower murder rates compared to those which have death penalty in place
(Bonner & Fessenden, 2000).
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Organizational Patterns
The following are some of the suggested patterns that you can use to organize your persuasive
speech.
1. A. F.O.R.E.S.T. (anecdotes, facts and figures, opinion, rhetorical questions, emotive language,
superlatives, tripling)
Below are the rules in applying this pattern.
(1) Anecdotes. Begin your speech with a personal story, observation, or experience.
(2) Facts and figures. Provide striking statistics that can support your ideas.
(3) Opinion. Add in your opinion. You can begin your statement with, “I believe that…”.
(4) Rhetorical questions. Think of and add engaging rhetorical questions (i.e., questions
which do not intend to elicit answers, but to make a point).
(5) Emotive language. Appeal to your audience’s emotion.
(6) Superlatives. Use superlatives to exaggerate an idea.
(7) Tripling. The rule of three in the English writing principle simply entails using three
words together to reinforce your point. This may add to the effectiveness of your
persuasion. A classic example is Julius Caesar’s statement: “Veni, vidi, vici” (I came, I saw,
I conquered).
Below is an example.
Anecdote Introduction
It is sad to share how my friend’s father died of lethal injection years ago.
He suffered and was killed for a crime that he never did.
There is no reason for the state to revive the death penalty.
Body
When RA 7659 or the Death Penalty Law was still active, six innocent people out of 10 convicts were executed.
Reviving this is unjustifiable.
Facts and Figures How many more innocent men and women will suffer?
We are a nation that values life and thinks that everyone deserves chances to change and live for their families.
Revive the law only when the lives of those wrongly sentenced are revived.
Opinion
Think. Analyze. Act.
Rhetorical Question Emotive language
Superlatives Tripling
2. Problem-Solution
Here’s how:
(1) Identify the problem.
(2) Provide a solution, which will show the practicality of your proposal.
For example:
A. Purpose: Persuade listeners that the LGBT community should be protected from
discrimination.
B. Main Point: LGBT members deserve to be protected by the state against exclusivity in
any workplace or office.
C. Supporting Idea: There have been horrible reports and cases of discrimination at work in
terms of promotion and benefits. Hence, there is a need to create and implement a policy
related to this.
Introduction
Current status of LGBT in the workplace
Problem Discrimination of LGBT in the workplace
Body
Policy that clearly defines the rights of LGBT
Solution Support 1
Support 2 for protection
for recognition
3. Problem-Cause-Solution
Below are the rules in applying this pattern.
(1) Identify the problem.
(2) Analyze the root causes of the problem.
(3) Provide a solution to the problem.
For example:
A. Purpose: Persuade listeners why the state or government needs to converge with the
private sector in maintaining and protecting national heritage sites.
B. Main Point: Preserving our national heritage sites such as century-old churches,
theaters, and other artifacts is the least priority of the government, so they should tie-up
with private establishments to maintain these historical places.
Supporting Idea One can observe that these sites are losing their historical and
cultural value.
1.1 Introduction
1.2 List of historical sites in the Philippines
Problem 1.3 Not priority of the government
2.1 Body
Root cause 2.2 Budget allocation
Support 1 2.2.1 Percentage allocated to preservation of sites
Solution 2.3 Promote public-private partnership
Support 2.3.1 Reports showing successful partnerships
4. Comparative Advantages
Below are the rules in applying this pattern.
(1) Identify the problem.
(2) Present at least two solutions to the problem.
(3) Compare the two in terms of practicality and feasibility.
For example:
A. Purpose: Persuade listeners on the need for political reform.
B. Main Point: Politics in the Philippines is very dirty.
C. Supporting Idea: There have been a lot of anomalies and illegal transactions going on in
the political system.
Introduction
Problem Solution 1 Vision of Philippine politics
Support 1 Dirty politics
Support 2 Body
Solution 2 Pass the genuine Freedom of Information (FO1) Bill into law
achieve transparency
Support 1 achieve good governance
Support 2 Comparison Support 1Abolish Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) or Pork Barrel
Support 2 Minimize illegal transaction
Minimize corruption
Can be good solutions
Practical
Feasible
For example:
A. Purpose: Persuade the audience to abstain from consuming alcohol.
B. Main Point: Abstaining from alcohol will help students live a healthy and safe life for
themselves and those around them while avoiding any criminal actions.
Campaign Against Underage Drinking
Attention-
grabber 1. Picture the following situation: It is Friday night; classes have just ended, and
you and your friends are looking for something fun to do. Everyone heads to
your classmate’s house, and soon bottles of alcohol are being passed around.
As the night deepens, everyone falls under the spell of alcohol, things get out of
hand, and some commit mistakes they would not do when sober.
a. This phenomenon of underage drinking is steadily affecting more young
Filipinos, as a study from the University of the Philippines found that 5.3
million youths drink alcoholic beverages.
b. I have researched this topic heavily, and today I will present the startling
facts about underage drinking that many teenagers might not know.
c. This speech aims not only to inform you of the risks of underage drinking,
but also to convince you to take action and campaign against underage
drinking to protect the youth.
Need 2. According to a study on the alcohol drinking patterns of high school students
in selected parts of the Philippines, a little more than one-third of the sample
population drink alcohol. These can have serious effects on underage drinkers,
such as the following:
a. Studies have shown that people who drink at a young age are more likely to
experiment with harder drugs.
b. People in an inebriated state have higher chances of being victims of
sexual assault.
c. Alcohol abuse among the young could lead to sexual behavior, which in turn
leads to teenage pregnancy or sexually-transmitted diseases.
Satisfaction 3. We have to educate the youth about the dangers of drinking alcohol.
a. Videos and posts on the risks of underage drinking can be shared on various
social platforms.
b. In school, events can be organized to promote knowledge of the
disadvantages and consequences of underage drinking.
4. We have to take it upon ourselves to act now if we do not want the youth to be
Visualization
victims of the following potential effects of underage drinking:
a. Accidents caused by underage drinking
b. Dropping out of school due to alcohol addiction
c. Sexual assault brought by drunken behavior
d. Teenage pregnancies
e. Alcoholism
5. I earnestly challenge you to abstain from alcohol and to take action and
Call to action
campaign against underage drinking. Are you with me?
Methods of Persuasion
Consider what Lucas (2011) writes about how the audience can be persuaded by a speaker. The
audience can be persuaded by the following reasons.
• They perceive that the speaker has credibility.
• They are convinced by the evidence presented by the speaker.
• They are convinced by the speaker’s reasoning.
• Their emotions are touched by the speaker’s ideas or use of language.
The above ideas highlight some of the methods you can use in your persuasive speech. These
methods are commonly used and proven to be effective by any prominent and excellent speaker
across the globe. The following are some tips on how to enhance your credibility, how to use
evidence, how to use reasoning, and how to observe ethics and emotional appeal in a persuasive
speech.
1. How to enhance your credibility
a. Explain how you became an expert on the topic.
You can do this by sharing how well you read, investigated, or researched the topic.
For example: You could share that in the beginning you did not know much about
your topic until you researched about it. By saying you researched on your topic,
your audience will feel that you made an effort in building your credibility by
collecting information.
b. Connect your experiences, beliefs, values or attitudes with your audience’s.
You can do this by telling your audience that you have the same experiences, beliefs,
values or attitudes.
For example: In the beginning of your speech, you can emphasize to your audience that
regardless of background, status, age, gender, beliefs, and values, among others, you all
have one thing in common and then add that which you have in common. By saying this,
your audience will feel respected and comfortable because you can identify with their
experiences, beliefs, or values.
c. Practice more often so you can deliver your speech with conviction.
You can do this by exposing yourself more often to speaking situations such as reciting
and reading announcements in class, introducing people in a program, hosting events,
participating in debates, or acting as a spokesperson of a group. Also, simply practicing
more often before your actual speech performance will increase your confidence and
help you deliver your speech with conviction.
• Circular Argument: This happens when the idea of a stated argument is repeated.
Example: My mother is a good teacher because she teaches me well.
How to avoid: Do not repeat the argument; instead, prove it.
• False Analogy: This happens when two things, which might be alike in some
respects, are compared and assumed to be similar in other ways.
Example: President Aquino is the Socrates of the 21st century.
How to avoid: Look at the characteristics, features, or components of two people or
objects closely to see whether they can really be compared or not.
Exercise II (Pair)
Each of the links below contains an exercise on logical fallacies. Choose one and follow
the instructions.
• Exercise on fallacies
https://web.cn.edu/kwheeler/Logic_Fallacies_Exercise.html
• Identifying Logical Fallacies
http://users.stlcc.edu/rpopper/logic/Practice.html
• Recognizing Logical Fallacies
http://writing.engr.psu.edu/exercises/fallacies.html
Let’s Practice
I. Group Activity. Work in groups of five. Bring a news video clip or a news article on any
current social or political issue in the Philippines (bullying, human trafficking, physical
abuse, theft, political dynasty, abuse of power, gender discrimination, among others).
Using the video or article as a jump-off point, deliver a two-minute speech using any of the
persuasive speaking types, organizational patterns, and method of persuasion. In your speech,
focus on why and how the issue should be stopped or minimized.
II. Individual Activity. Prepare and deliver a two-minute speech in class to convince your
classmates to visit your hometown, city, province, or country. Apply the appropriate persuasive
speech type, organizational pattern, and method of persuasion to your speech.
III. Group Activity. Work in groups of five. Think creatively and come up with your own innovation
in any field, such as technology, architecture, or fashion. Convince your classmates that it is
superior to the existing ones.
For example, your creation is a new mobile phone that is far better than the current brands
in terms of features, capacity, applications, and design. In your speech, you can present these
features that make your own technology look and sound better than the others. Apply the
persuasive speaking techniques that you have learned from this lesson.
IV. Group/Pair Activity. Research and bring a sample persuasive speech in class. Then, determine
the type and patterns of speech observed. On the margins, write comments on specific areas
which you think adhere or not to the principles of persuasive speech you have learned from the
activities and discussions.
V. Individual Activity.
1. Brainstorm on an emerging challenge, problem, or threat in your locality that can serve as a
topic for your persuasive speech. Below are some sample topics.
2. Then, prepare a five- to seven-minute speech using an appropriate persuasive speaking type
and organizational pattern. Remember to have the following:
a. well-defined goals
b. sufficient supporting ideas on how your listeners think and feel about the change you
want to happen
c. logical reasoning (concrete reasons why your listeners should support your ideas)
d. effective and powerful ways to gain the attention of your audience
e. compelling ideas to make your target audience feel and think
f. salient motives to target the salient needs of your audience
g. appropriate methods of persuasion
VI. Individual Activity. Find a partner. Evaluate his/her persuasive speech presentation using the
following performance rubric as your guide.
Purpose is well-defined.
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2016.
VGE GE SE LE N
Category Scoring Criteria
(5) (4) (3) (2) (1)
Attire is appropriate.
TOTAL
Legend:
VGE – To a very great extent; GE – To a great extent; SE – To some extent; LE – To a little
extent; N – Not at all
Scoring:
VGE – 93–115; GE – 70–92; SE – 47–69; LE – 24–46; N – 23
Reinforcement Activity
Group Work: From your group, identify one excellent persuasive speech manuscript on
an emerging challenge, problem, or threat in a particular locality. Then, share this with a
person in authority (local officials, police officers, professional workers, etc.) who is in a
field related to the topic of your chosen speech. Your objective is to get his/her
comments/ insights on how well you can address an issue. Write his/her comments on a
paper and assign a representative to present these in class.
E-link
Hone your knowledge in delivering a persuasive speech by checking the following websites.
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Let’s Reflect
Reflect on what you have learned after taking up this lesson by completing the chart
below.
I thought…
r thoughts or ideas about persuasive speech prior to the discussion of this lesson?
I learned that…
at new or additional ideas did you learn after taking up this lesson?
Glossary
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context – refers to the environment uhm, or ahh
where communication takes place
declaration – a type of illocutionary act
which brings about a change in the
external situation
decoding – the process of interpreting the
encoded message of the speaker by the
receiver
directive – a type of illocutionary act in
which the speaker tries to make the
addressee perform an action
dyad communication – communication that
occurs between two people
emotional appeal – a persuasive appeal
which aims to touch the audience’s
emotions
encoding – the process of converting the
message into words, actions, or other forms
that the speaker understands
entertainment speech – a type of speech
according to purpose which aims to provide
the audience with amusement
expressive – a type of illocutionary act
in which the speaker expresses
his/her feelings or emotional
reactions
extemporaneous speech – a type of
speech according to delivery which
involves speaking with limited
preparation
false analogy – a logical fallacy which
happens when two things, which might be
alike in some respects, are compared and
assumed to be similar in other ways
false authority – a logical fallacy which
occurs when a statement of someone who is
not an expert in the field in question is
being used in an argument
false cause and effect – a logical fallacy
which happens when the connection
established between two consecutive
events are not clear
feedback – the reactions, responses, or
information provided by the receiver
filler words – expressions that substitute
actual words in your speech, such as like,
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formal style – the speech style used in magazines, books, billboards, internet, and
formal settings other types of media
frozen style – a speech style which
remains unchanged through time
hasty generalization – a logical fallacy
which happens when a conclusion is
drawn from insufficient evidence
illocutionary act – a type of speech act
which refers to the social function of
what is said
impromptu speech – a type of speech
according to delivery which involves
speaking without advanced
preparation
indirect speech act – a speech act which
is characterized by a lack of direct
connection between the form of the
utterance and the intended meaning
informative speech – a type of speech
according to purpose which provides
the audience with a clear understanding
of the concept or idea presented by the
speaker
intercultural communication – refers
to the sending and receiving of
messages across languages and
cultures
interpersonal communication – refers
to the communication between and
among people which establishes
personal relationships between and
among them
intimate style – a speech style which
occurs between or among family
members or close individuals
intrapersonal communication – a
communication context which involves
only one person
jargon – refers to the set of
specialized vocabulary in a
certain field
locutionary act – the type of speech act
which refers to the actual act of
uttering
manuscript speech – a type of
speech according to delivery
which involves reading from a
prepared script
mass communication – refers to
communication that takes place
through television, radio, newspapers,
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memorized speech – a type of speech repair – a communicative strategy which
according to delivery which involves refers to how speakers address the
committing the speech to memory and problems in speaking, listening, and
delivering it without notes comprehending that they may encounter in
Monroe’s Motivated Sequence – an outline a conversation
for making persuasive speeches which is restriction – a communicative strategy
based on the psychology of persuasion which refers to any limitation that the
nomination – a communicative strategy speaker may have
which is applied to establish a topic small group – refers to communication that
nonverbal communication – refers to an involves at least three but not more than ten
interaction where gestures, movements, people engaging in face-to-face interaction
and expressions are used to convey and speech act – an utterance that a speaker
represent meanings makes to achieve an intended effect
performatives – verbs that execute the speech style – refers to the variation of
speech act that they intend to effect speech that speakers make according to
perlocutionary act – a type of speech act the situation or group
which refers to the resulting act of what is termination – a communicative strategy
said which refers to the conversation
persuasive speech – provides the audience participants’ close-initiating expressions
with well-argued ideas that can influence that end a topic in a conversation
their own beliefs and decisions topic control – refers to how procedural
public communication – refers to formality or informality affects the
communication in which a speaker delivers development of topic in conversations
or sends the message before or in front of a topic shifting – involves moving from one topic
group to another
question of fact – a type of question in tripling – the use of three words together
persuasive speech which revolves around to reinforce a point
whether something is true or not, existent turn-taking – the process by which
or not communicators decide who takes the
question of policy – a type of question in conversational floor
persuasive speech which focuses on what verbal communication – refers to an
policy or rule should be followed interaction in which words are used to relay
question of value – a type of question in a message
persuasive speech which discusses whether
a topic is good or bad, moral or immoral,
just or unjust
red herring – a logical fallacy which
happens when the answer does not
address the question
reframing – an impromptu speaking strategy
which means rephrasing or redefining the
topic into something that you want to talk
about
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Index
183
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
informative speech, 63, 80, 144, 151-155
feedback, 4-6, 9
message, 4-6, 9
receiver, 4-5, 9
speaker, 4-6, 9
emotional appeal, 167
encoding (see elements of communication)
entertainment speech, 63, 80, 135, 137-142
expressive (see speech acts)
extemporaneous speech, 80, 82, 88-90, 126,
128-
133
fallacy, 166-167
ad hominem, 166-167
circular argument, 166-167
false analogy, 166-167
false authority, 166-167
false cause and effect, 167
hasty generalization, 167
red herring, 167
false analogy (see fallacy)
false authority (see fallacy)
false cause and effect (see fallacy)
feedback (see elements of communication)
formal (see speech styles)
frozen (see speech styles)
hasty generalization (see fallacy)
illocutionary act (see speech acts)
impromptu speech, 80-82, 116, 118, 121-
125
bridging strategy, 119
opening, rule of three, clincher strategy,
119
past, present, future strategy, 118-119
playing devil’s advocate strategy, 120
point-reason-example/explanation-point
strategy, 119
reframing strategy, 120
indirect speech act (see speech acts)
184
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
acts) perlocutionary act (see speech
speech about concepts,
acts)
147 speech about
persuasive speech, 63, 80, 104-106, 156-159,
events, 147 165-170
speech about objects or
people, 146 speech about
processes, 147
intercultural communication, 19-20, 22-27
interpersonal communication (see
speech contexts)
intimate (see speech styles)
intrapersonal communication (see
speech contexts)
locutionary act (see speech acts)
manuscript speech, 81-82, 88-90,
94, 96-107 mass communication
(see speech contexts) memorized
speech, 81-82, 88-90, 111-115
message (see elements of
communication) models of
communication
Shannon-Weaver Model, 5-6, 9
Transaction Model, 6, 9
Monroe’s Motivated
Sequence (see
organizational patterns)
nomination (see communicative
strategies) nonverbal
communication, 10, 11-12
organizational patterns
chronological pattern, 148, 151-152
spatial/topical/categorical pattern, 148,
151-152
cause-effect pattern, 150-152
comparison-contrast, 151-152
A.F.O.R.E.S.T., 161
problem-solution, 161
problem-cause-solution, 162
comparative advantages, 162
Monroe’s Motivated Sequence,
163-164
performatives (see speech
185
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
speech that questions fact, 159 speech contexts, 31-34
speech that questions policy, 160 intrapersonal communication, 32, 34
speech that questions value, 159-160 interpersonal communication, 32, 34
speech that refutes, 160 dyad communication, 32, 34
public communication (see speech contexts) small group, 33-34, 37-38
purpose of speech, 63-64 public communication, 33-34, 37
receiver (see elements of communication) mass communication, 33-34, 37
red herring (see fallacy) speech delivery, 77, 79, 84-87
reframing strategy (see impromptu speech) speaking situations, 82-84
repair (see communicative strategies) speech editing, 67-68, 70-72
restriction (see communicative strategies) speech outline, 66, 74, 138-141
Shannon-Weaver Model (see models of speech styles, 35-36
communication) casual, 35, 37
small group (see speech contexts) consultative, 35, 39
speaker (see elements of communication) formal, 35, 37
speaking situations (see speech delivery) frozen, 35
speech acts, 41-43 intimate, 35
locutionary act, 44 speech topic, 64, 73
illocutionary act, 44 speech writing, 62, 68-69, 74-76
perlocutionary act, 44 speech writing patterns, 64-65, 74
indirect speech act, 44 termination (see communicative strategies)
performatives, 44 topic control (see communicative strategies)
assertive, 45, 46-47 topic shifting (see communicative strategies)
directive, 45, 46-47 Transaction Model (see models of
commissive, 45, 46-47 communication)
expressive, 45, 46-47 turn-taking (see communicative strategies)
declaration, 45, 46-47 verbal communication, 10