66 CHAPTER^5 Selecting Your Topic and Purpose
Key TeRmS
Review your Flashcards. The terms below are defined in the margins throughout this chapter.
affective effects 62
behavioral effects 63
central idea 63
cognitive effects 62
general purposes 61
preview 65
specific purpose 62
thesis statement 63
CRITICal ThINKINg exeRCISeS
- Use a piece of blank paper to brainstorm ideas for speeches. Fold it into eight sections
and label each, using a different category such as people, places, controversies,
education, media, concepts from other courses, or historical events. Jot down possible
topics in each category. After you’ve brainstormed in this way, select one or two of the
most promising topic areas and make a mind map that further narrows the subject.
File this paper for use during the term. - Obtain additional information on a site devoted to St. Augustine, one of the great figures
of rhetoric, and read Chapters 12 and 13 of his treatise on rhetoric. He gave this advice
seventeen centuries ago. Which principles still apply? - Some professors refer to the central idea or thesis statement by other names, including
the core idea, the subject sentence, or the residual message. Which of these terms
best clarify the concept for you? Why?
applICaTIoN exeRCISeS
- Discuss in a small group some ways you could add the element of novelty to the follow-
ing common topics: using seat belts, making a sandwich, watching television violence,
writing a résumé. - For each of the following topics, tell how you could create one speech to inform, one
to persuade, and one to entertain: negotiating a raise at work, attending an opera,
evaluating cable news programs, planning spring break, taking a recreational hike. - Choose one of the topics above and write a general purpose, specific purpose state-
ment, central idea or thesis statement, and preview that match the ideas you had for
informative, persuasive, and entertaining speeches. - Work with a small group of your classmates to create a mind map based on a very
general international topic such as China, global diseases, ethnic conflicts, or natural
disasters. Record your mind map in such a way that you can show and explain it to the
entire class.
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