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8: Supporting Ideas and Building Arguments

  • Page ID
    63568
    • Anonymous
    • LibreTexts

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    • 8.1: Using Research as Support
      This page highlights the critical role of "support" in public speaking, outlining its need for accuracy, authority, currency, and objectivity. Effective support clarifies content, boosts speaker credibility, and enhances engagement. It emphasizes using up-to-date information, especially in rapidly evolving fields, while also evaluating biases in sources. The text underlines that strong, relevant support contributes to a speech's vividness and memorability, fostering audience trust and engagement.
    • 8.2: Exploring Types of Support
      This page discusses critical elements for effective speeches, focusing on the use of statistics, definitions, examples, narratives, testimony, and analogies. It underscores the importance of accuracy and credibility in presenting facts and eyewitness accounts, particularly in significant events. Different types of definitions serve unique communication purposes. The text emphasizes the need to evaluate the reliability of analogies, distinguishing between figurative and literal types.
    • 8.3: Using Support and Creating Arguments
      This page emphasizes the importance of selecting appropriate support types—facts, statistics, stories, and quotes—to enhance public speaking. Speakers should clarify the significance of support by linking it to the main argument and analyzing its relevance. A three-step process—summarizing support, explaining its relevance, and drawing conclusions—facilitates effective communication.
    • 8.4: Chapter Exercises
      This page discusses Aban's discovery of a DHS information website sponsored by a fringe-militia group with an anti-immigration bias, raising concerns about credibility. It highlights ethical issues in content usage, source bias, and the manipulation of support in speeches. The importance of ethical considerations in speech preparation and the evaluation of sources is emphasized, urging a critical assessment of material used in presentations.


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