· Assignment List
· Week 3: Informative SPEECH
Week 3: Informative SPEECH
DUE: Jun 21, 2020 11:55 PM
Grade Details
Grade
N/A
Gradebook Comments
None
Assignment Details
Open Date
Jun 1, 2020 12:05 AM
Graded?
Yes
Points Possible
100.0
Resubmissions Allowed?
No
Attachments checked for originality?
Yes
Top of Form
Assignment Instructions
Speech Assignment
Communication is used to inform, to persuade and to analyze. In this assignment, you will write a speech that provides your audience information about a topic.
There are two (2) parts to be submitted in this assignment. Your presentation should be submitted as follows:
· A Power Point presentation file that is like a visual outline, with bullet points and maybe images. This is what you would show your audience.
· A Word document containing the wording of the speech. This is what you would say to your audience while you are showing them the Power Point presentation.
You may add audio to your PowerPoint if you wish, but the script (Word doc) will still be required. This allows us to process all assignments in Turnitin.
Your speech should be between 1000 - 1250 words. It's important to stay within that range. Good writers learn to adapt to size requirements of the writing they are asked to do. You can use the word count of both files to calculate the total word count.
Your speech should include an introduction which identifies your main point, a body in which you provide support for your main point, and a conclusion that wraps up your presentation and says something about the significance of what you’ve presented, just as you would do in a paper. The templates attached here give you good ideas of how the presentation and the speech script should look.
Be sure to look at the grading rubric for the assignment. There are specific limits on the amount of text on the slides. This is to help ensure that the font size stays big enough to be easily read. You also need to provide a reference list as the last slide in your Power Point.
· PURPOSE: To inform
· LENGTH: 1,000 -1250 words
· AUDIENCE: A general audience of people interested in the topic, peers in the classroom
· SOURCES: Total of 3, with 1-2 from the Library and 1-2 from discipline specific websites
· FORMAT: The citation style that is appropriate for your discipline and is appropriate for a speech
· DUE: In ASSIGNMENTS by SUNDAY 11:55 pm EST of Week 3
· SUBMIT: Submit your speech by uploading your Power Point file AND Word file to the Assignments tab.
Bottom of Form
Understanding
adoption
Informative PowerPoint
By Student Name
Professor Crawford
ENGL110
Date Due
Three ways to find templates:
1. Click on “File” and “New.”
2. Under the “Design” tab, you will see templates at the top of the screen.
3. Also under the “Design” tab, click on “Design Ideas” at the top right. You will see lots of cool slide options. If one slide doesn’t work, try another one.
Make your presentation interesting and colorful! (The white s.
1. · Assignment List
· Week 3: Informative SPEECH
Week 3: Informative SPEECH
DUE: Jun 21, 2020 11:55 PM
Grade Details
Grade
N/A
Gradebook Comments
None
Assignment Details
Open Date
Jun 1, 2020 12:05 AM
Graded?
Yes
Points Possible
100.0
Resubmissions Allowed?
No
Attachments checked for originality?
Yes
Top of Form
Assignment Instructions
Speech Assignment
Communication is used to inform, to persuade and to analyze. In
this assignment, you will write a speech that provides your
audience information about a topic.
There are two (2) parts to be submitted in this assignment.
Your presentation should be submitted as follows:
· A Power Point presentation file that is like a visual outline,
with bullet points and maybe images. This is what you would
show your audience.
· A Word document containing the wording of the speech. This
is what you would say to your audience while you are showing
them the Power Point presentation.
2. You may add audio to your PowerPoint if you wish, but the
script (Word doc) will still be required. This allows us to
process all assignments in Turnitin.
Your speech should be between 1000 - 1250 words. It's
important to stay within that range. Good writers learn to adapt
to size requirements of the writing they are asked to do. You
can use the word count of both files to calculate the total word
count.
Your speech should include an introduction which identifies
your main point, a body in which you provide support for your
main point, and a conclusion that wraps up your presentation
and says something about the significance of what you’ve
presented, just as you would do in a paper. The templates
attached here give you good ideas of how the presentation and
the speech script should look.
Be sure to look at the grading rubric for the assignment. There
are specific limits on the amount of text on the slides. This is to
help ensure that the font size stays big enough to be easily
read. You also need to provide a reference list as the last slide
in your Power Point.
· PURPOSE: To inform
· LENGTH: 1,000 -1250 words
· AUDIENCE: A general audience of people interested in the
topic, peers in the classroom
· SOURCES: Total of 3, with 1-2 from the Library and 1-2
from discipline specific websites
· FORMAT: The citation style that is appropriate for your
discipline and is appropriate for a speech
· DUE: In ASSIGNMENTS by SUNDAY 11:55 pm EST of
Week 3
· SUBMIT: Submit your speech by uploading your Power Point
file AND Word file to the Assignments tab.
Bottom of Form
3. Understanding
adoption
Informative PowerPoint
By Student Name
Professor Crawford
ENGL110
Date Due
Three ways to find templates:
1. Click on “File” and “New.”
2. Under the “Design” tab, you will see templates at the top of
the screen.
3. Also under the “Design” tab, click on “Design Ideas” at the
top right. You will see lots of cool slide options. If one slide
doesn’t work, try another one.
Make your presentation interesting and colorful! (The white
slides shown in this sample template are primarily to show good
organization, etc.)
1
Understanding adoption: outline
I. Introduction
II. History of Adoption
III. Ways to Adopt
IV. Adoption Myths
V. Success Stories
VI. Conclusion
VII. Works Cited
VIII. Photo Credits
4. (NOTICE THERE IS A SLIDE FOR EACH ITEM ON THIS
PAGE, AND THEY ARE PRESENTED IN THE SAME ORDER
AS THEY ARE LISTED HERE.)
Important: You will NOT be using the “Notes” section in
PowerPoint (where you see this sentence). Any text, other than
what is on the slides, should be included in a Word document,
per the Assignment instructions.
2
Introduction
You can use this space for bullet points, photos with captions,
etc. Include citations (on the slide) and complete source
information (on the Works Cited/References page) for any
information you obtained from a source.
3
Ways to adopt
According to Home Study Specialist Michael Smith, there are
several avenues one can take in pursuing adoption (2019). Some
of these include:
An adoption agency
Independent adoption
Family or friend referral
5. International
Domestic
Church organization
I designed this page using the “Design Ideas” I explained in the
Notes section of Slide 1. The image is free for use, as I
explained on slide 9.
4
Adoption Myths
Your text here
5
Success Stories
Your text here
6
conclusion
Your text here
6. 7
Works Cited
Carty, Thomas. “JOHN KENNEDY, RELIGION, AND
FOREIGN POLICY.” The Review of Faith & International
Affairs, vol. 9, no. 4, Taylor & Francis Ltd., Dec. 2011, pp. 51–
59, doi:10.1080/15570274.2011.630203.
https://apus.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?doci
d=proquest1034964832&context=PC&vid=01APUS_INST:01AP
US&lang=en&search_scope=MyInst_and_CI&adaptor=Primo%2
0Central&tab=Everything&query=any,contains,john%20kenned
y&facet=tlevel,include,peer_reviewed&offset=0
Helpful Hint: Use our library! It contains practically a limitless
amount of information and credible sources. View the tutorials
on the APUS library home page to learn how to navigate the
library. E-mail or chat with a librarian for help. Also, notice the
CITE button that appears with each source. It will format your
Works Cited for you! Just select which style you want and copy
and paste into your document. If needed, you can verify that it
is correct using the link below. If the formatting is weird, you
can do a “paste special” and adjust to your liking.
Don’t forget that you will use the title Works Cited if you are
using MLA style. Use References for APA. For other styles,
consult Purdue OWL.
https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/purdue_owl.html
Carty is a sample MLA Works Cited entry (using the cite button
in our library).
8
Photo credits
You can put your photo credits on a separate page so that your
7. Works Cited won’t look too jumbled.
Tip: On Google, type in what picture you want to search for,
like “children playing.” Click Images, Filter, License, then
“Free to share, modify, or use commercially.” For images that
appear using this search (like the one at right), no credit or
citation is required.
If all of your photos are free for use, put the following sentence
at the bottom of your Works Cited or on a Photo Credits page:
All images presented in this document are free to share, modify,
or use commercially.
9
Lastname 1
Student Name
Professor Name
English 110
## Month 2020
Title
Slide One
Write the text of your speech under the appropriate slide
subtitles (in paragraph form like this). Add more subtitles if you
need to. Include citations throughout your writing and complete
source information on the last page. This template is set up in
MLA style, but you may use APA, if you wish. Go to the Purdue
Online Writing Lab (OWL), a free website, for formatting,
citation, and Works Cited/References help for either style. A
sample Works Cited page is at the end of this document. A
simple and pretend MLA citation is at the end of this sentence
(Smith 74). Here is one for APA (Smith 2018).
Speaking of Works Cited, if you are in doubt if a source is
8. trustworthy or not, just use sources from our library. Our library
contains practically a limitless amount of information and
credible sources. View the tutorials on the APUS library home
page to learn how to navigate the library. E-mail or chat with a
librarian for help. Also, notice the CITE button that appears
with each source. It will format your Works Cited for you! Just
select which style you want and copy and paste into your
document. If needed, you can verify that it is correct on Purdue
OWL. If the formatting is weird, you can do a “paste special”
and adjust to your liking.
Slide Two
Slide Three
Slide Four
Slide Five
Slide Six
Slide Seven
Works Cited
Everett, Sherry, Warren, Charkes, Stantelli, John, Kann, Laura,
9. Collins, Janet, Kolbe, Lloyd. "Use of birth control pills,
condoms, and withdrawal among U.S. high school students."
Journal of Adolescent Health (2000): 112-118.
http://www.sciencedirect.com.ezproxy2.apus.edu/science/article
/pii/S1054139X9900125
Raga, Suzanne. 9 Forms of Birth Control Used in the Ancient
World. n.d. 21 May 2017.
<http://mentalfloss.com/article/501060/man-buys-two-metric-
tons-lego-bricks-sorts-them-machine-learning>.