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PERSUASIVE SPEAKING - ORGANIZATION Part 2 (Ch 14)

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PERSUASIVE SPEAKING - ORGANIZATION

Part 2 (Ch 14)

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Review

Goals of Persuasion Audience Attitudes Propositions

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Today

II. Patterns for Persuasive Speeches

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Types of Persuasion

Speech to Convince Speech to Actuate

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Organizational Patterns

Comparative Advantages * Criteria Satisfaction Refutative Statement of Reasons * Problem – Solution * Problem – Cause – Solution Motivated Sequence *

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Example Topic

Proposition: ABC brand car is the best choice!

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Statement of Reasons

Most basic structure Best for proposition of Fact Main points are reasons

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Statement of Reasons

I. Second strongest reasonII. Less strong…III. Strongest reason

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Car Example: Statement of Reasons I want my audience to believe that

ABC brand car is the best on the market

I. ABC car is priced reasonablyII. ABC car is very safeIII. ABC car gets excellent gas mileage

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Comparative Advantages

Demonstrates that proposed change has more value than status quo (or A is better than B)

Main points are the various advantages

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Car example: Comparative Adv. I want my audience to understand

why ABC car is better than XYZ carI. ABC car is priced more reasonably

than XYZ carII. ABC car is safer than XYZ carIII. ABC car gets better gas mileage than

XYZ car

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NOT!!!!

I want my audience to understand why ABC car is better than XYZ car

I. Advantages of ABC carII. Disadvantages of XYZ car

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Criteria Satisfaction

Seeks agreement on criteria, then demonstrates how criteria are met

Main point 1 = criteria Main point 2 = satisfaction

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Car example: Criteria Satisfaction ABC car is a good choiceI. We can agree on criteria in selecting a

carA. PriceB. SafetyC. Gas mileage

II. ABC car meets these criteria, and is therefore a good choice

I. PriceII. SafetyIII. Gas mileage

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Refutative

Main points are reasons to challenge opposing arguments

Like “backward” Statement of Reasons

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Problem Solution

Clarifies nature of problem and offers a solution

Beneficial for Audiences uninformed / neutral about the

problem Audiences who believe there is a problem,

but unsure / neutral on solutions

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Car example: Problem-Solution The high price of gas can be

alleviated by the type of car you driveI. Gas prices are highest in 20 yearsII. ABC vehicle gets excellent gas

mileage

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Problem – Cause – Solution

Adds one more point between Problem and Solution

Cause – Discusses the causes of the stated problem

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Motivated Sequence

Designed to motivate audience to act Combines “Problem Solution” + Explicit

appeals to act Monroe’s Motivated Sequence

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Motivated Sequence

I. Attention (Introduction)II. Need / ProblemIII. Satisfaction / SolutionIV. VisualizationV. Action (Conclusion)

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Car example: Motivated SequenceI. Attention: (Introduction)II. Need: Gas prices are high (evidence)III. Satisfaction: Drive a gas efficient car

such as ABC vehicle (show how this solves issue)

IV. Visualization: Further benefits of vehicle (safety, price)

V. Action: Purchase ABC vehicle