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6: Researching Your Speech

  • Page ID
    174349

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    • 6.1: Learning Objectives and Key Terms
      This page outlines essential learning objectives for research, emphasizing its value and enjoyment. It covers establishing research needs, identifying sources, distinguishing between primary and secondary research, and ethical source incorporation. It includes strategies to prevent plagiarism and differentiates direct quotations from paraphrases.
    • 6.2: Beginning the Research Process
      This page emphasizes the importance of consulting librarians for research assistance, as they can guide in finding reliable information and developing strategies, but do not conduct research. Maintaining a research log, organizing citations, and using cloud storage are also recommended to enhance research efficiency and comprehension of the topic.
    • 6.3: What Is Research?
      This page discusses the importance of research for writers and speakers, highlighting primary research methods (surveys and interviews) that provide firsthand data, and secondary research, which involves reporting on existing studies. It emphasizes the necessity of ethical considerations and accurate crediting of original sources to avoid misinformation.
    • 6.4: Developing a Research Strategy
      This page outlines a research strategy for speech preparation, emphasizing time management and early identification of research needs. It discusses the importance of evaluating source reliability, categorizing information types, and introducing the CRAAP method (Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, Purpose). The text provides practical tips for efficiently evaluating sources, such as skimming introductions, using tables of contents, and maintaining a research log.
    • 6.5: Citing Sources
      This page discusses the significance of citing sources in public speaking to ensure credibility and prevent plagiarism. It covers APA and MLA citation styles, emphasizes ethical use of sources, and outlines incorporating citations in speeches. Key strategies include allocating time for research, taking detailed notes, differentiating one's voice from quoted sources, and limiting direct quotes to 10% of the content.


    This page titled 6: Researching Your Speech is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Sara Kim, Douglas Marshall, June Pulliam, Victoria VanNest, and James Yeargain (LOUIS: The Louisiana Library Network) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.