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Is It Necessary to Get Enough Sleep Speech

Is It Necessary to Get Enough Sleep Speech

I need a  Persuasive Speech: on Taking Care Of Sleep/why the body needs sleep. • Student must tell the audience how to think, act, or feel about their topic • I  need an outline, Final Draft, and create a corresponding PowerPoint Must use the provided template PowerPoints must be at least 3 slides, and no more than 9 1 Speech Type: Question of [Policy, Fact, or Value] Organizational Pattern: [Problem-Cause-Solution, 3 Arguments, or Comparative Advantages] I. Attention Getter: (In 1-3 sentences, grab the audience’s attention with something creative and interesting to your topic; usually a statistic, a quotation, a rhetorical question, or story works here, do not say ‘hi, my name is … and today I’m going to be talking about …’) II. Audience Relevance: (In 1-3 sentences answer: Why should your audience care about this topic? How does this benefit them? In what ways might they be affected by this topic?) III. Speaker Credibility: (In 1-3 sentences answer: Why are you an authority to speak on this topic? In what ways might you have been affected by the topic?) IV. Thesis: (One, carefully-worded, declarative sentence that tells us what your speech is about. It cannot tell us what the topics of your 3 Main Points will be, that comes next.) V. Preview of 3 Main Points: (In one sentence, explicitly lay out what your 3 Main Points will be, ex: ‘First, I will talk about X, second, I will talk about Y, and third I will talk about Z.’ Do not go into details about these main points, that’s what the body is for.) VI. Transition to Main Point 1: (In 1 sentence, Review, Signpost, Preview; ex. ‘I just introduced my topic, now let’s talk about X.’) VII. Main Point 1: (In 1-2 sentences, summarize your Main Point and preview what the 2, more specific sub-points will be.) a. Sub-Point A: (Aspect #1 of your Main Point: this is where all of your supportive information and sources will go.) 2 b. Sub-Point B: (Aspect #2 of your Main Point: this is where all of your supportive information and sources will go.) (more sub-points as needed) VIII. Transition to Main Point 2: (In 1 sentence: Review, Signpost, Preview; ex. ‘I just introduced my topic, now let’s talk about X.’) IX. Main Point 2: (In 1-2 sentences, summarize your Main Point and preview what the 2, more specific sub-points will be.) a. Sub-Point A: (Aspect #1 of your Main Point: this is where all of your supportive information and sources will go.) b. Sub-Point B: (Aspect #2 of your Main Point: this is where all of your supportive information and sources will go.) (more sub-points as needed) X. Transition to Main Point 3: (In 1 sentence: Review, Signpost, Preview; ex. ‘I just introduced my topic, now let’s talk about X.’) XI. Main Point 3: (In 1-2 sentences, summarize your Main Point and preview what the 2, more specific sub-points will be.) a. Sub-Point A: (Aspect #1 of your Main Point: this is where all of your supportive information and sources will go.) b. Sub-Point B: (Aspect #2 of your Main Point: this is where all of your supportive information and sources will go.) (more sub-points as needed) XII. Transition to the Conclusion: (In 1 sentence: Review, Signpost, Preview; ex. ‘I just spoke about Z, now let’s conclude.’) 3 XIII. Review of 3 Main Points: (Review what your 3 Main Points were, ex. ‘First, I spoke about X, second, I spoke about Y, and third, I spoke about Z.’) XIV. Restate Thesis: (One, carefully-worded, declarative sentence that tells us what your speech is about.) XV. Call to Action: (One, carefully-worded sentence that tells your audience exactly what you want them to do.) XVI. Clincher / Memorable Closer: (the last thing you’re going to say, be creative and make it count! PRO-TIP: tie this back to your Attention Getter for a more polished presentation) 4 References [Stickle, T. (Aug. 14, 2020). These are sample apa-style references to depict what this page should look like. Be sure to make note of the format positioning on the ruler at the top of the document. If you do not see a ruler, click ‘view’ and then ‘ruler’ Stickle, T. (Aug. 17, 2020). Your next reference starts directly below the previous reference. To automatically generate apa-style reference page citations, visit: https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_and_citation/apa_style/apa_formatting_and_style_g uide/general_format.html or https://www.citationmachine.net/apa] Purchase answer to see full attachment Explanation & Answer: Speech 3 Slides PPT Tags: mood swings Energy Metabolism feeling refreshed User generated content is uploaded by users for the purposes of learning and should be used following our company’shonor code & terms of service.

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