Public Speaking Handbook

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Notes (^457)



  1. G. M. Hodis, N. R. Bardhan, and F. A. Hodis, “Patterns of
    Change in Willingness to Communicate in Public Speak-
    ing Contexts: A Latent Growth Modeling Analysis,”
    Journal of Applied Communication Research 38, 3 (2010):
    248–67.

  2. Amber N. Finn, Chris R. Sawyer, and Paul Schrodt,
    “Examining the Effects of Exposure Therapy on Public
    Speaking State Anxiety.” Communication Education 58
    (2009): 92–109.

  3. MacIntyre and MacDonald, “Public-Speaking Anxiety”;
    R. B. Rubin, A. M. Rubin, and F. F. Jordan, “Effects of
    Instruction on Communication Apprehension and Com-
    munication Competence,” Communication Education 46
    (April 1997): 104–14.

  4. Lisa M. Schroeder, “The Effects of Skills Training on Com-
    munication Satisfaction and Communication Anxiety in
    the Basic Speech Course,” Communication Research Reports
    19 (2002): 380–88; Alain Morin, “History of Exposure to
    Audiences as a Developmental Antecedent of Public Self-
    Consciousness,” Current Research in Social Psychology 5
    (March 2000): 33–46.

  5. MacIntyre and MacDonald, “Public-Speaking Anxiety”;
    Peter D. MacIntyre and K. A. Thivierge, “The Effects
    of Audience Pleasantness, Audience Familiarity, and
    Speaking Contexts on Public-Speaking Anxiety and Will-
    ingness to Speak,” Communication Quarterly 43 (1995):
    456–66; Peter D. MacIntyre, K. A. Thivierge, and J. Renee
    MacDonald, “The Effects of Audience Interest, Respon-
    siveness, and Evaluation on Public-Speaking Anxiety and
    Related Variables,” Communication Research Reports 14
    (1997): 157–68.
    Chapter 3 Presenting Your First Speech

  6. The late Waldo Braden, longtime professor of speech
    communication at Louisiana State University, presented
    a memorable speech at the 1982 Florida Speech Commu-
    nication Association in which he emphasized that “the
    audience writes the speech” to indicate the importance of
    being an audience-centered speaker.

  7. J. C. Pearson, J. T. Child, and D. H. Kahl, Jr., “Preparation
    Meeting Opportunity: How Do College Students Pre-
    pare for Public Speeches?” Communication Quarterly 54, 3
    (August 2006): 351–66.

  8. Clifford Stoll, as cited by Kevin A. Miller, “Capture: The
    Essential Survival Skill for Leaders Buckling Under Infor-
    mation Overload,” Leadership (Spring 1992): 85.

  9. Don Hewitt, interview broadcast on 60 Minutes (January 24,
    2010).

  10. Greg Winter, “The Chips Are Down: Frito-Lay Cuts Costs
    with Smaller Servings,” Austin American-Statesman (January
    2, 2001): A6.

  11. These statistics are from an Allstate Insurance advertise-
    ment, The New York Times (February 17, 2010): A24.

  12. We thank Barbara Patton of Texas State University for
    sharing her speech outline with us.

  13. Pearson, Child, and Kahl, “Preparation Meeting Opportu-
    nity.”

  14. Grace Hildenbrand, “Cinderella,” Texas State University
    student speech, 2013.


Chapter 4 Speaking Freely and Ethically


  1. Jason Pontin, “Free Speech in the Era of Its Technologi-
    cal Amplification,” MIT Technology Review 116.2 (March/
    April 2013): 62.

  2. National Communication Association, “NCA Credo for
    Communication Ethics.” 1999. 27 June 2001. http://www
    .natcom.org/conferences/Ethics/ethicsconfcredo99.htm.

  3. “Obama Counter-Terrorism Speech Interrupted by Heckler,”
    UPI.com. 23 May 2013.

  4. Samuel Walker, Hate Speech (Lincoln: U of Nebraska P,











  1. “Libel and Slander.” The Ethical Spectacle. 1 June 1997.
    1 June 1998. http://www.spectacle.org/freespch/musm/
    libel.html.

  2. “Three Decades Later, Free Speech Vets Return to UC
    Berkeley,” Sacramento Bee 3 December 1994: A1.

  3. James S. Tyre, “Legal Definition of Obscenity, Pornogra-
    phy.” 1 June 1997. 1 June 1998 http://internet.ggu.edu/
    university_library/reg/_legal_obscene.html.

  4. “Supreme Court Rules: Cyberspace Will Be Free! ACLU
    Hails Victory in Internet Censorship Challenge.” American
    Civil Liberties Union Freedom Network. 26 June 1997.
    1 June 1998 http://www.aclu.org/news/no62697a.html.

  5. Sue Anne Pressley, “Oprah Winfrey Wins Case Filed
    by Cattlemen,” Washington Post 27 February 1998.
    1 June 1998 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/
    WPlate/1998-02/27/1001022798-idx.html.

  6. Associated Press, “Free-Speech, Other Groups File
    Briefs Opposing Patriot Act.” 4 November 2003. 13 June

  7. http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/news
    .aspx?id=12174.

  8. Brian Schweitzer, “Proclamation of Clemency for Mon-
    tanans Convicted Under the Montana Sedition Act in
    1918–1919.” 3 May 2006. (Thanks to George Moss, Vaughn
    College, Flushing, New York, for providing the authors
    with a copy of this document.)

  9. Terry Phillips, “Opinion: In Defense of Free Speech and
    Helen Thomas,” MercuryNews.com. 15 June 2010. 21 June

  10. http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_15303135.

  11. Bill Carter and Felicity Barringer, “Patriotic Time, Dissent
    Is Muted,” New York Times 28 September 2001: B8.

  12. Walker, Hate Speech, 2.

  13. Daniel Downs and Gloria Cowan, “Predicting the Impor-
    tance of Freedom of Speech and the Perceived Harm of
    Hate Speech,” Journal of Applied Social Psychology 42.6
    (June 2012): 1372.

  14. Edwin R. Bayley, Joe McCarthy and the Press (Madison:
    Wisconsin UP, 1981) 29.

  15. Chidsey Dickson, “Re: Question.” Online posting.
    27 October 2005. WPA Listserv. 27 October 2005. http://
    lists.asu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0510&L=WPA-L&P=
    R117883&I=-3.

  16. “Spurlock Sorry for Speech,” Austin American-Statesman
    29 March 2006: A2.

  17. Kathy Fitzpatrick, “U.S. Public Diplomacy,” Vital Speeches
    of the Day (15 April 2004): 412–17.

  18. Peg Tyre, “Improving on History,” Newsweek 2 July 2001:




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