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11: Public Speaking

  • Page ID
    269407
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    • 11.1: Public Speaking Overview
      Public speaking is a distinct form of communication in which one speaker addresses many, requiring more planning, responsibility, and skill than interpersonal or small group communication. Despite common anxiety about it, public speaking remains a vital tool for sharing information, inspiring change, and connecting communities, while also providing personal benefits like confidence, self-presentation skills, and the ability to craft clear, engaging messages.
    • 11.2: Audience Analysis
      Developing a good speech begins with understanding the audience. By gathering information, making inferences, and adapting content, speakers can tailor their message to the audience’s knowledge, attitudes, and expectations—whether informing, persuading, or simply connecting more effectively.
    • 11.3: The Topic and Thesis
      In this section we look at speech development as a dynamic, puzzle-like process where all parts—audience analysis, content, delivery, and organization—must fit together into a unified whole. Key steps include selecting and narrowing a topic, defining a clear purpose, and crafting a concise thesis, with the body carrying most of the speech’s weight.
    • 11.4: The Body
      In this section we look at developing the body of a speech, which makes up about 85% of the presentation and delivers the core message through 2–4 well-organized main points. Effective speeches use clear organization, logical structures, strong substructure, and deliberate transitions to keep the audience engaged, on track, and able to remember the content.
    • 11.5: Introductions and Conclusions
      Regardless of how well developed the body of the speech is, the speaker has to be able to grab and keep the audience's interest. The speaker gets them to want to listen. How well a speaker starts and ends the speech will significantly affect how the audience attends to the message and remembers the message.
    • 11.6: Public Speaking Virtually
      In this section we look at virtual, or online, public speaking, where new media platforms expand how and where speeches are delivered. Online speaking requires clarity of purpose, attention to delivery mode, and awareness of diverse audiences, along with careful rehearsal of verbal and nonverbal delivery, technology use, and presentation aids to ensure effective communication.


    This page titled 11: Public Speaking is shared under a mixed 1.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Keith Green, Ruth Fairchild, Bev Knudsen, & Darcy Lease-Gubrud (Minnesota State Colleges and Universities) .