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M Oct 11 -
Research
proposal presentations due
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| The
proposal presentation should be no fewer than 3 and no longer than
5 minutes in length (you will be cut off if you exceed 5 minutes). |
What exactly
is the assignment?
For this assignment, you will transform
your written proposal into a 3-5 minute oral/multimedia presentation.
Why are we doing
this?
Since PWR2 is concerned
explicitly with encouraging students to examine the rhetorical distinctions
among "presentations" in various forms (i.e., written, oral,
and multimedia), for this assignment, you will convert your written
project proposal into a 3-5 minute oral/multimedia presentation. As
you produce your text, be sure to consider the five
canons of rhetoric -- invention, arrangement, style, memory and
delivery -- and the way in which your use of these canons might change
across media. Also keep in mind the rhetorical situation of your presentation:
you'll need to attend to your audience -- making your point and
keeping their interest -- as well as to your text and to your own ethos
as an author.
How
do the Five Canons of Rhetoric relate to my presentation?
- Invention:
Your presentation may or may not be similiar in form, content,
or voice to your proposal. Use creativity to select the approach and
structure most appropriate to your purpose and rhetorical situation.
Your presentation may be an overview of your formal proposal -- or
you may use a single example to provide a groundwork for your argument.
Also consider creative frameworks for your presentation -- structuring
it as a movie trailer, a behind-the-scenes look at your project in
progress, or even an expose.
- Arrangement:
You need
to consider how you will arrange, organize, and structure your talk.
This means both outlining your presentation and, if you are using
slides, considering the most appropriate use of audio and/or visual
materials. The presentation should have a clear beginning, middle
and end.
- Style:
You need
to decide on the voice of your presentation, as well as your own persona
as a rhetor. Will you invite audience participation? Will you hold
allow audience comments only at the end? Will you approach your audience
as a peer? As an expert in your subject? Will you be formal or informal
in approach? All these questions are starting points for thinking
about the style of your presentation.
- Memory:
This canon has as much to do with improvisation
(i.e., being able to read your audience and adapt your presentation
to suite their current needs) as it does with memorization or a level
of comfort with your material.
- Delivery:
You will need to decide on the method by
which you will deliver your material. This involves considering whether
you will use audio or visual aids as well as embodied rhetorics, such
as the way you comport yourself, dress, or project your voice while
presenting.
For your presentation, you
must clearly convey your topic to your audience -- such as it is currently
defined -- as well as your working hypothesis, and you must do so within
5 minutes. Keep in mind that all presentations will be on works in
progress so that no one will expect you to have arrived at definitive
conclusions or to have completed your research. However, your presentation,
like your proposal, should nevertheless offer the audience a well-developed
understanding of the topic you're addressing, your approach to it, and
your research methodology.
- What
extra resources do you recommend for this assignment?
- For your proposal presentation,
you may choose to read Lunsford & Ruszkiewicz, "Spoken
Arguments."
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