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Public Speaking (The Five Canons of Rhetoric (Invention - balance what…
Public Speaking
- The Five Canons of Rhetoric
- Invention - balance what needs to hear and what needs to say.
- Arrangement - parts lenght.
- Style - how to say, present speech.
- Memory - don't forget what to say.
- Delivery - projection, intonation. movement.
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- Speaking and writing are different mediums.
- Language is acquired. Writing is learned.
- Language evolved. Writing was invented.
- Language is ubiquitous. Writing is not.
- Speaking and writing are different mediums
- The visual techniques of writing often don't translate to speaking
- Reading text written for the eye flatten out your natural delivery style.
- So, write speeches are for the ear, not the eye.
5.
- When speaking, you move back and forth between conceptualization, formulation, and articulation.
- When listening, you move back and forth between perceiving, decoding and predicting.
- Thus, listeners need cues to easily and quickly decode talk.
6.
- Listeners need cues to easily and quickly talk.
- Contextual cues provide situational information.
- Prosodic cues (pitch, rate, etc.) provide auditory information.