Types of Speeches Oral Comm
Types of Speeches Oral Comm
Types of Speeches Oral Comm
Types of
Communicative Strategy
People communicate every day to establish and maintain relationships, know and understand
themselves, and find meaning in the daily grind. Moreover, since humans are social beings who survive more
effectively through sensible discourses, they are always driven to learn the skills of creating and sustaining
meaningful conversations. Successful communication requires understanding of the relationship between
words and sentences and the speech acts they represent. However, a conversation may be complex at times;
that is why some people get lost along the way and misunderstand each other. It is only when we willingly
cooperate and speak in socially approved ways that we can make a conversation meaningful.
Since engaging in conversation is also bound by implicit rules, Cohen (1990) states that strategies must be
used to start and maintain a conversation. Knowing and applying grammar appropriately is one of the most
basic strategies to maintain a conversation. The following are some strategies that people use when
communicating.
1. Nomination. It is the process whereby a speaker launches or provides a background for the discussion
topic. Topic nomination or initiation also happens when the speaker prompt other members to introduce a
new topic so that the topic will not end.
2. Restriction in communication refers to any limitation you may have as a speaker. It involves restricting the
discussion to the topic offered or presented. To achieve this, all the participants should have noted and
accepted the topic introduced and keep it all throughout the discussion.
3. Turn-taking. It is the process of providing equal opportunities to all the participants to express their views
and insights to the discussion.
4. Topic Control. This involves the act of sustaining the topic for the discussion. Part of this allowing the
participants to contribute to the maintenance of the topic. Topic control is making sure that the discussion
sticks to the topic on hand.
5. Topic Shifting. It refers to the process of transition from one topic to another with a purpose of possibly
closing the conversation. This happens when the participants already achieved the purpose of a prior talk or
to avoid possible conflicts in the present discussion.
6. Topic Repair. This refers to solving problems or errors which may interrupt the discussion. The topic
repair has two kinds: self-initiated repair and other-initiated repair.
7. Termination. Termination refers to the conversation participants’ close-initiating expressions that end a
topic in a conversation. Most of the time, the topic initiator takes responsibility to signal the end of the
discussion as well.
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When writing your script for the commercial, answer these 10 questions.
Why do tourists visit this place?
What do many visitors like to do here?
What would be best for a day trip?
What should one do for a good night out?
Where can visitors get the best food?
Where can visitors buy their souvenirs?
What outdoor activities are famous?
What is amazing about the weather?
What is the best thing to do here during summer?
What do tourists say about this vacation spot?
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Type of
Speeches
“It is the delivery that makes the orator’s success.”
-Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
Since speech delivery is an oral presentation, it is more on how a speaker delivers it rather than what
he delivers. Of course, the content matters but it is the manner of delivery that aids the audience’s
understanding. The listeners have to rely on the speaker in terms of verbal and non-verbal cues. Speeches
are categorized according to several types. In speech delivery, 2 P’s are needed: practice and preparation. By
practice, it means delivering the speech for many times. While, preparation means doing a research and
planning the speech in terms of content and organization.
Writing for the spoke word is a specific discipline. Speeches should be written giving ample
consideration that is heard not read. The written speech should reflect the intention as well as the style of the
speaker. The main purpose is for listeners to easily understand it. In developing a speech manuscript, you
have to follow the following steps: (1) choosing a topic; (2) analyzing the audience; (30 sourcing the
information; (4) outlining and organizing the speech contents.
1. CHOOSING A TOPIC