Published on: September 11, 2024
Commemorative Speech Critique SPCH 219 Mod 5 Commemorative SpeechMANNYFRESH19G1 day ago2 viewsMichael Jordan Commemorative Speech. Your critique on the speech should follow the guidelines below:Identify ONE positive element for each of the following items (A, B, and C).A: Introduction, PreviewB: Body, Main PointsC: Summary, ConclusionChecklist for Review of Commemorative SpeechAudience—Is the audience and the occasion apparent?Title—Does the title that fit well with the commemorated person or group or occasion? Introduction—Does the speech include an attention-getting important or characterizing event or trait or facts or story or quote? Was this something to which the audience could relate and feel?Body—Were these issues addressed in the speech?1. Reason to commemorate this person or event.2. Relationship of the speaker to the person or event, including how this relates to the audience’s lives.3. Specific examples of what this person has accomplished, achieved, or contributed, who has benefited from the life of this person or group, and why it would matter to the audience.4. Impression or impact the person or group has made on others and how this relates to the audience.5. What the audience can learn from what was described about the individual or group.6. An anecdote, short story, brief list of facts, or short story, or something else memorable to wrap up the main ideas before closing the speech.Conclusion—A conclusion that both emphasized the values of the commemorated person or group, and at the same time, gave the audience a way to remember the main message (such as a turn of a phrase, a vivid metaphor, or a word-painting, or other strong visceral or visual closing)Memorability Analysis ChecklistOrganization• something to gain attention• clear main ideas• coherent transitionsLanguage• with details• concrete, vivid, colorful• appropriate for the topic, audience, and event• turn or twist of a popular phrase to make a new meaning• use of a familiar concept or quote in a new wayDelivery• pace that fits the purpose – usually without rushing• pauses and vocal variety to be expressive of the meaning – not just to have variety, but to carry the meaning of what is being spoken• rhythm that adds power to the meaning of a key idea• strong eye contact without staring or looking too much at notes, nor too long at any one person• minimal physical movement, limited to movements that carry a purpose Rubric Commemorative CritiqueModule 5 -Rubric Commemorative CritiqueCriteriaRatingsPtsIntroductionview longer descriptionFull Marks25 ptsNo Marks0 pts25 ptsBodyview longer descriptionFull Marks25 ptsNo Marks0 pts25 ptsSummary, Conclusionview longer descriptionFull Marks25 ptsNo Marks0 pts25 ptsMemorabilityview longer descriptionFull Marks25 ptsNo Marks0 pts25 ptsFurther requirementview longer descriptionFull Marks0 ptsNo Marks0 pts0 ptsTotal Points: 100
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