Read The Well-Spoken Woman Online
Authors: Christine K. Jahnke
A speech should have a flow that the audience can discern and follow. It shouldn't be a deluge of information, nor should it be a linear stream of data. A speech should not start at point
A
and end up at point
Z.
When you are writing for the eye, the information can be laid out in a straight line. The reader can go back and reread something she missed the first time. A more holistic or full-circle approach will ensure that the listeners hear your main points and that they stick. Good speech writing is literally well rounded, meaning you end where you began. The speech's opening should lay out the topic and purpose and foreshadow the theme. The body of the speech covers the main points that
support the goal and objectives. The conclusion isn't something new. The conclusion summarizes the main points and revisits the main theme.
Speech Flow
Open
âtell them what you are going to talk about.
Body
âtell the main points
Close
âtell them what you told them.
Outline the Body of the Speech
The body of the speech is the speech. Organize the main points by developing an outline that divides the content into limited, manageable parts. With an outline, you will be able to maintain order and balance throughout and literally see how ideas might flow together. You can also see which ideas have been overemphasized to the exclusion of others. Limit the overall length to no more than three or four main points. There are five primary methods of arranging content.
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I. The first wave of the women's movement begins in 1848 in Seneca Falls, New York.
A. Women in Wyoming are granted the right to vote in 1890.
B. In 1920, the suffrage amendment is signed into law.
II. In the mid-twentieth century, the second wave focuses on gender equality in laws and culture.
A. The 1963 Equal Pay Act makes it illegal to discriminate in pay.
B. The National Organization for Women is founded in 1966.
III. The present-day movement is a continuation of the second wave and a response to perceived failures.
A. The Hill-Thomas confirmation hearings rivet the nation on workplace sexual discrimination and fuel the 1992 “Year of the Woman” in politics.
B. Younger women create the third wave, which heightens awareness of racial issues and generational differences.
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I. Great Pyrenees: A Large-Breed Dog
A. History of breed
B. Breed information
II. Temperament and Personality
A. Good with children & other animals
B. Requires obedience training
III. Care and Feeding
A. Diet
B. Exercise
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I. Three principal causes of offshore oil disasters:
A. Poor federal oversight
B. Lack of proper equipment maintenance
C. Company failure to take preventive steps
II. The effects of oil spills create additional problems:
A. Worker death and injury
B. Economic hardship for fishing and tourism industries
C. Environmental havoc
III. What can be done to limit drilling accidents:
A. Federal and local legislation
B. Corporate responsibility and accountability
C. Citizen input
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Speech Writing Step 4: Open and Close Well
Now that you have established a theme and drafted the outline, write the introduction and the conclusion, starting with the intro. Contrary to popular belief, audiences remember what they hear first better than any other point of the speech. They remember second best what they hear last. The opening is the prologue that sets the stage for the rest of the play. It can be as brief as thirty seconds or as long as two or three minutes, depending on the overall length of the speech. Use the opening to accomplish the four points listed here, and the cell phones will remain in sleep mode.
For many people, the beginning is the most difficult portion to get through. The ability to start well can be hindered by different factors, including a bad introduction, bad acoustics, equipment glitches, and stage fright. Environmental distractions or a case of the nerves can cause
speakers to say and do peculiar things. If you don't preplan the opening, you risk permitting something else to become the central focus. Here are the worst ways to start.
Maximize the Opening
Busted Openings
Bang-Up Openings
A good introduction is free of the obvious, ordinary, and offhand. It is a creative articulation of the speech topic and theme. The well-spoken women who delivered the following well-written dynamic openers earned rave reviews.
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Fifty years ago when I began exploring the ocean, no oneânot Jacques Perrin, nor Jacques Cousteau or Rachel Carsonâimagined that we could do anything to harm the ocean by what we put into it. Or by what we took out of it. It seemed, at the time, to be a sea of Eden, but now we know and now we are facing Paradise Lost.
I want to share with you my personal view of changes in the sea that affect all of us. And to consider why it matters that in fifty years we've lostâactually, we've taken, we've eatenâmore than 90 percent of the big fish in the sea. Why you should care that nearly half of the coral reefs have disappeared? Why a mysterious depletion of oxygen in large areas of the Pacific should concern not only the creatures that are dying but it really should concern you as well?
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To Frederick Douglass is credited the plea that “the Negro be not judged by the heights to which he is risen, but by the depths from which he has climbed.” Judged on that basis, the Negro woman embodies one of the modern miracles of the New World.
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Fifteen years ago, [my husband] Jim was White House press secretary. Our son Scott was just two years old. All our dreams had come true.
But then one rainy afternoon in March our dreams were shattered by an assassination attempt on Ronald Reagan. President Reagan was shot. And so was Jim. We almost lost Jim that day. And we almost lost the president. But thanks to the heroism of the Secret Service and the determination of the physicians and staff at George Washington Hospital, Jim lived and so did the president. Thank God.
But our lives would never be quite the same. All it took was one gun, one bullet and one man who should never have owned a gun.
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Friends and fellow citizens, I stand before you tonight under indictment for the alleged crime of having voted at the last presidential election, without having a lawful right to vote. It shall be my work this evening to prove to you that in thus voting, I not only committed no crime but, instead, simply exercised my citizen's rights, guaranteed to me and all United States citizens by the National Constitution, beyond the power of any state to deny.
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I take the floor today as the dean of the Democratic women in the Senate. I say to my colleagues and to all who are watching: We women are mad as
hell, and we don't want to take it anymore. We are mad that in this institu-tion, when all is said and done, more gets said than gets done.
We are here today, united as Democratic women, to be a voice, a voice for change. We have a checklist for change we think we can do before this Congress adjourns. These are issues that focus on the big picture of what our country is facing, but they also focus on the impact these issues have on families. We look at macro issues that affect the world and the macaroni-and-cheese issues that affect families.
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When I first received the invitation to speak here, I was the CEO of an $80 billion Fortune 11 company with 145,000 employees in 178 countries around the world. I held that job for nearly six years. It was also a company that hired its fair share of graduates from North Carolina A&T. You could always tell who they were. For some reason, they were the ones that had stickers on their desks that read, “Beat the Eagles.”
But as you may have heard, I don't have that job anymore. After the news of my departure broke, I called the school, and asked: do you still want me to come and be your commencement speaker? Chancellor Renick put my fears to rest. He said, “Carly, if anything, you probably have more in common with these students now than you did before.” And he's right. After all, I've been working on my resume. I've been lining up my references. I bought a new interview suit. If there are any recruiters here, I'll be free around 11 a.m.
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