Support Material and Evidence - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Support Material and Evidence

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Support Material and Evidence Acknowledging Your Sources Public speakers acknowledge their sources in 2 ways: orally in the speech and in written form in the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Support Material and Evidence


1
Support Material and Evidence
2
Acknowledging Your Sources
  • Public speakers acknowledge their sources in 2
    ways orally in the speech and in written form
    in the bibliography or Reference Page.
  • With oral citations, speakers mention, or cite,
    the sources of their information during the
    speech. For example
  • According to a June 2010 article in the San Jose
    Mercury News, the phrase digital music poses
    the highest risk of leading searchers to websites
    containing spyware and viruses.

3
Citing Sources Orally
  • Dr. Ruben Stein, a business professor at
    Columbia University, found in his research that
    a supervisors communication competence has a
    dramatic influence on subordinates
    satisfaction with workplace communication. His
    2008 article in the Journal of Business
    Communication also reported a direct link
    between how supervisors communicate and job
    satisfaction.

4
Oral Source Citations
  • In these examples, the speaker tells the
    audience who authored or published a particular
    piece of information, and what year it was
    published.
  • In the written Reference Page (attached to your
    outline), your information would include the
    author, date of publication, title, place of
    publication, and publisher.
  • Youll need this information to give credibility
    to your argument.

5
How current in your information and sources?
  • Does the author refer to statistics or
    developments that are several years old?
  • Are examples drawn from current events?
  • Does the authors language suggest that the
    document was written recently or several years
    ago?
  • For a website or webpage, do many broken links
    appear on the page?
  • Is the source biased?
  • Is the source credible?

6
Use 4 Types of Supporting Material/Evidence
  • Examples Illustrates, describes, or represents
    things it can be brief or extended. Use real,
    not hypothetical examples. Examples put a human
    face on statistics and information.
  • Statistics Data that demonstrates
    relationships. Stats summarize information,
    demonstrates proof, makes points memorable.
  • Expert Testimony Provides credibility to
    definitions, statistics, etc.
  • Definition Defines the proposition, current
    policy, laws, etc.

7
Types of Definitions
  • Logical A dictionary definition
  • Etymological/historical Explains how the word
    or policy youre defining was derived. Its link
    to some historical event or drawn from root
    words. Example boycott
  • Operational Explains how something or some
    policy works or operates or steps that make up
    a process.
  • By Negation Sometimes the best way to clarify
    a term is to explain what its not. Abstract
    notions are hard to define, thus we reference to
    opposites. Example I cant tell you what
    justice is, so Ill tell you what it is not.
  • By Authority A word/policy/law is defined by a
    credible source.
  • By Example Explain by demonstration or
    narrative. Examples help make terms concrete.
    They perk up your audience by adding human
    interest/drama.
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