| During the remainder of the semester you will 
		be required to present three speeches.
 
			
			The first speech will be 
		informative (For 
		informative speeches, 
      the goal of the speech is to present interesting information well) 
      	providing background information on what is 
		currently important for us to understand about 
		your 
      topic. 
			The second
			speech is also informative 
      	  and should involve a thesis 
			that
      illustrates (but does not resolve) a controversy within your term research topic area, 
			a speech that fairly presents two sides of 
		an issue. 
			The third speech will be persuasive (that is, the goal of the speech is to
			change minds of audience members or get them to 
			take action).  Later you will receive detailed 
			descriptions of the speeches. 
			 No later than 
		Friday, September 19, you should select a general subject 
		which will be suitable for all three speeches. In other words, you will need a subject which is broad enough 
		that you can give an informative speech on 
		some part of it AND a topic that is 
		significant (controversial, complex, problematic) enough to merit trying 
		to persuade your fellow citizens about something involving your 
		subject.   [  
		List
of Some Possible Research Topics  
		] For example, 
you might pick the topic AIDS. If so, your 
first speech ("status quo") might describe what we know about why and how 
the virus has become so deadly in Africa.  Your second 
informative ("issues") speech might use the thesis, "Activists 
argue that industrial nations should offer free or low cost medicines to African 
nations but others disagree." Your persuasive speech might try to get us 
to contribute money to the AIDS 
Foundation for Africa.   You should begin now (well before your speeches are due) to research your topic. Start building a bibliography during the next week 
or two. Since you have plenty of time to get materials, you can use interlibrary loan to order items the Monmouth Library does not have. Be sure to take advantage of the 
reference staff of the library. While the 
Hewes Library On-line Catalog is good starting point, I think you may find better material in 
periodical and news indexes or in government 
documents. Especially useful will be the Web based indexes found
through the  library home page 
("Academic Search Premier (EBSCOhost," 
"Lexis-Nexis-Academic," 
CQ (Congressional Quarterly) Researcher).   
		You may wish to pursue some variation of the topic 
		you spoke about in the My Community" presentation, although that is not 
		required.  The subjects of 
		abortion and 
		drug abuse-in-sports are off-limits.
		 Any other civically important subject is possible, 
		only one student per topic -- and I must approve all subjects (first come, first served).  References Requirements 
        You must have at least five sources 
		for each speech.  At least FOUR of the sources must be materials 
		available through library data bases or in print (even though you may have accessed them on-line).  
		ONE of the sources must be your overview source and it must be 
		identified as such in the "Works Cited" section of your speech 
		outline.  You may have and are 
        encouraged to include more than five sources.References to the source material should always 
        be cited using M.L.A. format unless I have given you permission to use a 
        different format.You must submit a preliminary  
		ANNOTATED 
        BIBLIOGRAPHY (in MLA format) with at least 
		SIX, available-in-print or in a data-base sources and as many other sources as you care to include by 
		
		Wednesday, September 28.  
        Be sure to identify the overview source.  CQ 
		Researcher is one way to find an overview source.  
		(Ask me for other ideas.)  
		For each of the six (or more) items in your 
		bibliography, be sure to include a one to three sentence annotation 
		summarizing the content of the source item in your own words.Smart researchers examine 
		the references cited in the better articles they find (esp. from overview sources) 
		in order to see if any of those references may be useful for their
          projects.  Useful index terms for your searches can also be 
		discovered this way.
You may (and likely will) repeat references used 
		in earlier speeches in the "Works Cited" section of the later speech 
		outlines. |