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Speaking to Inspire: Ceremonial and Motivational Speeches

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Speaking to Inspire: Ceremonial and Motivational Speeches

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Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.7

187 reviews

Beginner level
No prior experience required
Flexible schedule
2 weeks at 10 hours a week
Learn at your own pace
98%
Most learners liked this course

Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.7

187 reviews

Beginner level
No prior experience required
Flexible schedule
2 weeks at 10 hours a week
Learn at your own pace
98%
Most learners liked this course

Build your subject-matter expertise

This course is part of the Dynamic Public Speaking Specialization
When you enroll in this course, you'll also be enrolled in this Specialization.
  • Learn new concepts from industry experts
  • Gain a foundational understanding of a subject or tool
  • Develop job-relevant skills with hands-on projects
  • Earn a shareable career certificate

There are 6 modules in this course

The most memorable speeches inspire, entertain, and praise. By blending stories and eloquence, great speeches highlight the core values motivating an audience. You might need to do this in a keynote address, a eulogy, or simply a business meeting. Inspiring audiences is a common, but difficult writing challenge. You want a speech that elevates the topic and the audience.

This course gives you a method for preparing and delivering speeches that inspire and entertain. By the end of this course, you should be able to compose and deliver moving speeches that praise core audience values through evidence, storytelling, and humor. You should be able to write eloquent passages in tones appropriate to the audience and occasion and speak fluidly from either a well-prepared manuscript or from memory. Learners will record speeches, providing and receiving peer feedback.

Welcome! We begin this week with an overview of the course: What it is and what we’ll be doing. From there we can start preparing our speeches. We’ll start by finding the core values that will drive the speech. Values that speak to the topic and inspire your audience. We’ll then explore how to discuss those values through evidence and storytelling. By the end of the week, you’ll have a list of values and stories to write a speech. With a sense for the topic, we can then get to know each other with an introductory speech. It’s a fun and easy speech that allows you to get to know some of your classmates.

What's included

18 videos7 readings3 assignments1 peer review

18 videosTotal 92 minutes
  • Welcome!1 minute
  • What’s this course about?5 minutes
  • Ceremonial speech assignment7 minutes
  • What do ceremonial speeches do?5 minutes
  • How to find your fit6 minutes
  • A process for preparing speeches3 minutes
  • You need values at the core of your speech4 minutes
  • Finding your values6 minutes
  • Supporting your values6 minutes
  • What is a story?5 minutes
  • How stories help your speech6 minutes
  • Structuring your story3 minutes
  • What's the point of the story?9 minutes
  • Writing characters7 minutes
  • Writing description4 minutes
  • Transforming stories into anecdotes6 minutes
  • Sample introduction speech2 minutes
  • How to record speech videos4 minutes
7 readingsTotal 54 minutes
  • Week 1 preview2 minutes
  • Get help and meet other learners. Join your Community!5 minutes
  • Ceremonial speech assignment description (Optional reading)10 minutes
  • Values in action--Emma Watson15 minutes
  • The most touching story--Frank Oz remembers Jim Henson15 minutes
  • Week one lesson summaries2 minutes
  • Week one assignment check-in5 minutes
3 assignmentsTotal 90 minutes
  • Ceremonial speaking30 minutes
  • Stories30 minutes
  • Week one quiz30 minutes
1 peer reviewTotal 20 minutes
  • Introductory Speech20 minutes

Last week, we worked on developing the pieces of our speech (values and support). This week, we’ll take those pieces and build a speech outline. There are a few broad arrangement models that prove helpful in organizing the speech in a compelling and moving way. We’ll look to some of the very specific concerns that emerge when dealing with speeches of introduction, eulogies, and award speeches. Having discussed invention and arrangement, we'll watch and evaluate a sample speech. You’ll watch a speech, write up some feedback, and read how others analyzed the speech.

What's included

8 videos7 readings1 assignment1 peer review

8 videosTotal 52 minutes
  • Arrangement concerns5 minutes
  • Topical arrangement5 minutes
  • Narrative arrangement7 minutes
  • Informative arrangement7 minutes
  • Speeches of introduction7 minutes
  • Presenting and receiving awards6 minutes
  • Eulogies9 minutes
  • Sample ceremonial speech7 minutes
7 readingsTotal 41 minutes
  • Week 2 preview2 minutes
  • Arrangement at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame10 minutes
  • Public mourning--The 9th Earl Spencer's Eulogy for Princess Diana of Wales15 minutes
  • Speech analysis #1 overview2 minutes
  • Matt's review (Optional)5 minutes
  • Week two lesson summaries2 minutes
  • Week two assignment check-in5 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Week two quiz30 minutes
1 peer reviewTotal 20 minutes
  • Speech analysis #120 minutes

You have your outline, so now let transform that into a manuscript. This week is all about style. We’ll start by thinking about what overall style is most appropriate for your speech. Then we’ll move through a bunch of stylistic devices. These are equations for eloquence. You put your value into these stylistic devices and eloquence pops out the other side. From there, we can talk more about word choice and overall tone. Once we have the basic structure down, we can look to openers and closers, basically figuring out how to get into and out of the speech. Finally, we’ll talk a little bit about writing for the ear and drafting a speech manuscript (which is different from an essay). The optional assignment this week is a draft manuscript. This is just a chance to get some feedback from others on an early draft.

What's included

11 videos6 readings3 assignments1 peer review

11 videosTotal 54 minutes
  • Different speech styles4 minutes
  • Stylistic devices: Allusions and rhetorical question6 minutes
  • Stylistic devices: Tricolon and enuimeratio5 minutes
  • Stylistic devices: Diacope, epanalesis, epizeuzis.5 minutes
  • What is speech “tone”?2 minutes
  • Presidential tone comparison9 minutes
  • Presidential tone analysis6 minutes
  • Writing for the ear5 minutes
  • Preparing a manuscript5 minutes
  • Formatting a manuscript for speech delivery5 minutes
  • Speaking from a manuscript3 minutes
6 readingsTotal 39 minutes
  • Week 3 preview2 minutes
  • Strategies for openers10 minutes
  • Strategies for closers10 minutes
  • Which manuscript format do you prefer?10 minutes
  • Week three lesson summaries2 minutes
  • Week three assignment check-in5 minutes
3 assignmentsTotal 90 minutes
  • Style30 minutes
  • Manuscripts30 minutes
  • Week three quiz30 minutes
1 peer reviewTotal 60 minutes
  • Speech manuscript draft60 minutes

You have your manuscript, now let’s perform it. Memory and delivery are clearly linked. We need to decide whether we’ll extemporize the speech, work from a manuscript, or memorize the whole thing. No one approach is inherently better, but should be a good response to the rhetorical situation. We’ll talk about making this decision. Now we can finally get into some humor work. Some of this is certainly invention, but a lot of it is delivery. We’ll think about where and how to insert some humor into our speeches. And just as important, what to do when a joke falls flat. We’ll wrap up with some general delivery and performance issues. The assignment this week is a speech analysis. You’ll watch a speech, write up some feedback, and read how others analyzed the speech.

What's included

12 videos6 readings1 assignment1 peer review

12 videosTotal 67 minutes
  • Should I read my manuscript or memorize it?5 minutes
  • Overview of memorization6 minutes
  • Memory techniques5 minutes
  • Memorization process5 minutes
  • Humor in speeches7 minutes
  • Integrating humor8 minutes
  • What humor do I leave in? What do I take out?5 minutes
  • A failed joke is your best opportunity6 minutes
  • Martin Nevdahl: How the voice works5 minutes
  • Martin Nevdahl: Techniques for good vocal performance6 minutes
  • Martin Nevdahl: Maintaining vocal health6 minutes
  • Sample ceremonial speech #25 minutes
6 readingsTotal 35 minutes
  • Week 4 preview2 minutes
  • Funny building to meaning: Conan O'Brien's 2011 Commencement Address20 minutes
  • Speech analysis #2 overview1 minute
  • Matt's review (Optional)5 minutes
  • Week four lesson summaries2 minutes
  • Week four assignment check-in5 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Week four quiz30 minutes
1 peer reviewTotal 20 minutes
  • Speech analysis #220 minutes

Thank you for your time in this course. I hope the material has proven helpful in some way. We concluded our discussion of the ceremonial speech last week. I would like to spend a bit of time reflecting on the course. We will end this week with your final speech.

What's included

2 videos

2 videosTotal 4 minutes
  • Course review3 minutes
  • Other courses in this specialization2 minutes

Choice 1: For the final assignment, you can either submit a video or written speech (below). | Choice 2: For the final assignment, you can either submit a video (above) or written speech.

What's included

1 video1 reading2 peer reviews

1 videoTotal 7 minutes
  • Sample ceremonial speech7 minutes
1 readingTotal 15 minutes
  • Sample ceremonial manuscript15 minutes
2 peer reviewsTotal 120 minutes
  • Ceremonial speech60 minutes
  • Ceremonial manuscript60 minutes

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4.9 (42 ratings)
University of Washington
9 Courses886,776 learners

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Reviewed on Nov 21, 2021

Definitely my favorite course in this specialization.

MR
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Reviewed on Sep 21, 2020

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Reviewed on Dec 7, 2018

It was an amazing experience with University of Washington and Sir Matt MacGarrity. Thanx to Coursera and Prime Minister for providing such learning opportunity.

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