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Social Sci LibreTexts

4: Say What?

  • Page ID
    270397
    • Anonymous
    • LibreTexts

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    • 4.1: Types of Supporting Materials
      Essentially, there are seven types of supporting materials: examples, narratives, definitions, descriptions, historical and scientific fact, statistics, and testimony. Each provides a different type of support, and you will want to choose the supporting materials that best help you make the point you want to get across to your audience.
    • 4.2: 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.
    • 4.3: Plagiarism
      Although there are many ways that you could undermine your ethical stance before an audience, the one that stands out and is committed most commonly in academic contexts is plagiarism. A dictionary definition of plagiarism would be “the act of using another person’s words or ideas without giving credit to that person” (Merriam-Webster, 2015).
    • 4.4: Using Research in a Speech


    This page titled 4: Say What? is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Anonymous.

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