Chronological Sequencespatial Sequencetopical Sequ
I need two outline
Informative speech – topic- first generation immigrant from Iran to United State
persuasive speech – topic – how corona effected me during pandamic
Both works should behave the same format,
pleasee follow the format and Please sended as soon as possible because its a speech and I have to memorize it
I attached here the format
Notes for Chapter 10
Ten Building Blocks That Will Help You Outline the Body of Your Speech
Approach Organization Logically – Look for key ideas, patterns, and trends in your research that are supported by examples, quotations, or testimony. Remember the outline is simply a tool for structure and clarity.
Think in terms of the overall plan of your speech – don’t try to fill in all details at the beginning of the process.
Principles of Outlining – Formal outline refers to the body of the speech and informal outline refers to the introduction, conclusion, bibliography
The body should contain between two to four main points or numerals in a 5 to 7 minute speech. (You can google it if you don’t know how many words have a minute of speech. If you see, normally have 150 words each minute. So, in 5 minutes is 750 words, and the two speeches in total should be 1500 words.
Main points in the body should be structures in an organizational sequence that is logical, interesting, and appropriate to the topic.
Chronological Sequence
Spatial Sequence
Topical Sequence
Other Sequences – Problem-Solution, motivation sequence .
A system of Roman Numerals, letters, and Arabic numbers should be combined with indentation to identify main and subordinate levels.
The Outline Should Include Supporting Materials That Are Coordinated and Subordinated in a Logical Manner.
Each Subdivision Must Contain at Least Two Items.
Main Points (Numerals) and Supporting Items Should be Linguistically Parallel.
The Outline Should Identify Sources for Major Supporting Materials. The Outline Should Include External Transitions Between Main Numerals.
Internal transitions (e.g. also, then, next, in addition to, finally) link supporting materials within a subtopic.
Body I. (first main point)
A. (supporting detail) B. (supporting detail)
II. (second main point)
A. (supporting detail) 1.
2. B. (supporting detail)
Your Speaking Notes include the introduction, body, and conclusion
Write legibly, use large lettering, and double-space between some of the lines
You may want colors to highlight specific examples, statistics, or quotations
When transferring your outline to note cards, remember that your objective is ease of communication; you want notes to help you communicate quickly and effectively
use 3 credible sources in each speech