Informative presentation
Instructions
Topic: American and Indian Culture
- Select a topic which allows you to inform your audience of a significant aspect of a culture that is different than your own. Possible topics include social customs, family traditions, holidays, clothing, food, religious traditions, and sporting activities.
- Research your topic. Be imaginative in choosing content for your speech. It is not enough to simply summarize basic information from the Internet about a country or culture. Narrow the topic by selecting one specific aspect on which to focus your ideas.
- Organize the main points of your speech using an informative pattern of organization. Your speech should give your audience a deeper understanding of your topic, but should not be designed to affect your audience’s beliefs, attitudes, or behavior.
- Provide adequate support for each main point by citing at least three credible sources in the speech. Incorporate examples, narratives, testimonial evidence, statistics, analogies, explanations, and/or definitions where appropriate. Sources must be cited orally in the speech. If you have had direct contact with a different culture, you should supplement your research with your personal experience.
- Create an introduction and conclusion.
- Once you have thought through each part of the speech (introduction, body, & conclusion), create a rough draft outline of the speech.
- Create speaking notes to use during your delivery. Use key words and phrases rather than complete sentences. Your notes should serve only as a memory aid and should not be a word-for-word manuscript of your speech.
6 years ago
5
Answer(2)![blurred-text]()
![]()
![blurred-text]()
![]()
Purchase the answer to view it

NOT RATED
- AMERICANANDINDIANCULTURE.pptx
- fruj1.pdf
- LettertoanEditor.edited.docx
Purchase the answer to view it

NOT RATED
- JAPANESECLOTHING.docx
- JAPANESECLOTHING1.docx
other Questions(10)
- Business Ethics and Sustainability assessment 2
- EA (gen)
- ASSESSMENT DUE NOVEMBER 2 2015 10 AM
- what contributes to the spread of HIV/AIDS
- Literature Phase 4 IP
- Financial Statement Analysis
- Heinz's dilemma is a frequently used example in many ethics and morality classes. One well-known version of the dilemma, used in Lawrence Kohlberg's stages of moral development, is stated as follows: A woman was near death from a special kind of cancer. T
- BUS 475 Week 2 Knowledge Check
- I need a help in Intermediate Microeconomics
- Account financing
