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Essay/Speech 4: How-To or Persuasive Speech

Essay/Speech 4

How-To or Persuasive Speech

Your how-to or persuasive speech includes a very broad prompt in order to allow you to explore a topic of your own individual choosing. You have a choice of writing either a how-to speech or a persuasive speech.

Prompt:

Be sure that any topic choice is school appropriate, meaning that the topic is not offensive, vulgar, does not glorify illegal behavior, and does not infringe on the rights of any specific group.

How-to - Write and present a speech explaining how to do, make, use, fix, repair, or accomplish something.

Because you are not  demonstrating the process and are only talking about it, it is best to select a topic explaining how to do something that is more general. For example, if you are explaining how to bake a cake, you will not perform the action of baking a cake. This can be tricky to explain, so a better choice might be how to improve your reputation or how to quit biting your nails. Something that doesn't require that you  show your audience the actions you're speaking about will be a better topic for this type of how-to speech.

Your other option is to write a Persuasive Speech.

Persuasive - Write and present a persuasive speech to convince your audience that your opinion, assertion, or claim is correct or valid.

This can be a personal opinion or an opinion about the world around you. For example, you could try to persuade your audience that one musician or music style is better than another in your personal opinion; on the other hand, you instead could look at a broader topic by persuading your audience whether or not a specific public policy is effective.

The Written Script

In addition to your video or video link, you will submit a written text of your speech, just as you would submit an essay. Within that script, if you are writing using any sources,  you will want to cite your sources.  If you are writing using personal knowledge or opinions,  then you will not need to cite sources .

Often, speeches are not cited because the speaker is speaking from their own personal experiences or knowledge rather than using experts to support their opinions. Whether or not you need to cite sources will depend on what topic you choose to write about. Because of this factor of extra work, you will want to think carefully about what type of topic you want to write about based on how much research and source citation you would like to do.

The content of your speech will make it clear to your instructor whether or not you used sources. For example, if you are trying to persuade your audience that a certain law is not effective, then you will be expected to support that opinion with expert opinions and data, signaling the use of sources. However, if you are writing about how you personally trained your dog, then that will rely on personal experiences that would not require sources.

To be clear, the rule is that if you did any sort of research or reading outside of this course information in order to do the assignment, then you need to cite your source.

Length of Assignment

The written text of your speech should be 2 full pages in length and should follow APA formatting guidelines (typed, double spaced, 1" margins, 12 pt. Times New Roman font, following standard English conventions).

You will submit a written text and either the video of you giving your speech OR a link to your video that you've posted on YouTube if you choose to upload it to that site.  Remember to keep the video settings private but shareable via the link if you want to post it to YouTube if you don't want multiple people to view your video. You do  not  have to post the video to YouTube if you don't know how or prefer not to. That is only an  option of how to share the video with your teacher via a link. Remember, you can choose to just upload the video straight to this assignment.

You'll also want to add a title page to the front of your written speech.

The title page should include your name, the class name (English 10) and the title of your speech:

Rhetorical Appeals and Devices

In any speech, regardless of the content, the speaker should use rhetorical appeals and devices to engage their audience. Whether you write a how-to speech or a persuasive speech, you will be expected to use lessons about rhetorical elements to engage your audience in your speech.

The Rubric

Your speech and its text will be graded according to the elements in the rubric that you can find in this assignment. You can see from the rubric below that half of your speech's points will be related to the content of your essay (including APA citation when appropriate) and the use of words and rhetorical elements to communicate that purpose. The other half of the points will come from your presentation of the speech, including your body language, eye contact, and vocal variation. Be sure to read through the rubric before you begin this assignment.

Getting Ready to Write

You can use the prewriting documents provided to help you brainstorm and organize your writing.

If you're going to write a How-To speech, use the  How-To Speech Prewriting.

If you're going to write a Persuasive speech, use the  Persuasive Speech Prewriting.

Important Policies:

· All essays are submitted to various plagiarism software programs to check for copied material. Copying parts or all of other people's written work and passing it off as yours violates the school's Academic Integrity Policy, which could lead to expulsion.

· The first use of platforms such as CourseHero to cheat will lead to a resubmission of the assignment that will result in a grade no greater than a 'B'. The second violation will result in failure in the course. The third violation will result in dismissal from the program.