Taking care of elderly in indian culture

Presentation: Informative Presentation Directions
Assignment:    Informative Presentation
Time limit:     4-6 minutes
Point value:    75 Points
Instructional materials:    Chapter 10 Topic Selection
Chapter 11 Using Supporting Materials (pgs. 296-301)
Chapter 12 Organizing your Presentation
Chapter 13 Delivery (pgs. 340-355)
Chapter 14 Informative Presentations
Submission:    See Recording Instructions below
An informative speaker shares information with others to enhance their knowledge or understanding of a particular topic. Most adult audiences enjoy information that is relevant to their own lives and needs.

This assignment will give you the opportunity to gain experience speaking extemporaneously, to narrow a topic and organize content using a pattern of organization, and to orally cite sources of supporting material.

Instructions
Select a topic which allows you to inform your audience of a significant aspect of a culture that is different than your own. Possible topics include social customs, family traditions, holidays, clothing, food, religious traditions, and sporting activities. Refer to Chapter 7 of your text as a guide.
Research your topic. Be imaginative in choosing content for your speech. It is not enough to simply summarize basic information from the Internet about a country or culture. Narrow the topic by selecting one specific aspect on which to focus your ideas.

Organize the main points of your speech using an informative pattern of organization. Your speech should give your audience a deeper understanding of your topic, but should not be designed to affect your audiences beliefs, attitudes, or behavior.

Provide adequate support for each main point by citing at least three credible sources in the speech. Incorporate examples, narratives, testimonial evidence, statistics, analogies, explanations, and/or definitions where appropriate. Sources must be cited orally in the speech. If you have had direct contact with a different culture, you should supplement your research with your personal experience.
Create an introduction and conclusion.

Once you have thought through each part of the speech (introduction, body, & conclusion), create a rough draft outline of the speech.

Create speaking notes to use during your delivery. Use key words and phrases rather than complete sentences. Your notes should serve only as a memory aid and should not be a word-for-word manuscript of your speech.

Practice your presentation before videoing yourself so that you can deliver the information with only occasional glances at your notes.

Consider asking friends or family members to view your presentation before submitting.
Need some inspiration?  Check out the presentations below:
Sample Speech: Night Terrors
Sample Speech: Acupuncture
How will I be graded?
Click here to open the rubric which will be used to evaluate your submission.

When Recording your final draft: After recording has started but before you begin your assignment you must verify your identity by holding a valid state- or nationally- issued picture ID to the camera so that it is visible and recognizable to our assessment staff. If you do not do this step you will be asked to resubmit. A driver’s license or passport are preferred.

Recording Instructions
Submitting for this assignment is an easy three-step process:

Record

Upload to YouTube

Submit a link to your YouTube video

You can record and save videos using software on your computer before uploading them to YouTube. The most common computer recording programs are Camera for Windows 8+ and Photo Booth for Mac OS X (a download may be required). You may also use your device manual to look up how to record videos. After saving your video to your computer, please upload it to YouTube.

An alternative approach is recording a video on mobile device (phone or tablet). Please note that this could affect the quality of your video and you will need to download the YouTube app to upload your video.

Using YouTube: YouTube is a free service which allows anyone to post videos online and share them. Please understand that your videos do not need to be public. You may make your video Unlisted as long as you share the link with StraighterLine for evaluation. You should not make your video Private because graders will not be able to view it. Once you have received feedback you can delete your video or make it private, however, good work is always worth sharing (though we do recommend that you edit out any appearance of your ID).

Changing YouTube Privacy Settings

Last modified: Tuesday, July 9, 2019, 2:50 PM