5fd58a3513a9fe0030c4fd39-1607830488-TYPES OF SPEECHES
5fd58a3513a9fe0030c4fd39-1607830488-TYPES OF SPEECHES
5fd58a3513a9fe0030c4fd39-1607830488-TYPES OF SPEECHES
Taal, Batangas
Quarter 2 – Lesson 9:
TYPES OF SPEECHES
STUDY GUIDE
Types of Speeches
When a Guest Speaker gives a speech before an audience, most of the time, he/she
reads a fully written out speech. This is called Reading from a Manuscript or Speaking from
a Manuscript. When a student joins an oratorical contest, he/she memorizes the full Speech
beforehand. This is called a Memorized speech. When without preparation, or hardly any,
you are suddenly asked to give the Welcome Remarks in a program that is about to start or
is already ongoing, what you will be delivering is an Impromptu Speech. But when you
deliver the a Speech from a prepared outline of your ideas, complete with supporting data,
testimonies, and statistics, this is the Extemporaneous Speech, delivered without having
been written in full, without memorizing, or without reading from a manuscript prepared
beforehand.
There are, however, drawbacks to this type of delivery such as the following:
1. The speaker can just go on, and sometimes, with no point to make at all.
2. The Speaker may be so rattled and disorganized that the speech ends up with not
much sense.
1. The outline helps the Speaker remember the particular order of points he/she wants
to make. There is no need to memorize paragraph upon paragraph that make up the
speech.
2. At the same time, the outline allows the speaker to jump from one point to another
or even rearrange the order of the Speech’s point should circumstances demand it
without the Audience knowing or noticing the change.
The delivery of the Speech is less formal than a Manuscript Speech, more conversational
than a memorized speech, and prevents the speaker from losing eye contact with the
audience. Sometimes, Speaker using Extemporaneous delivery may bring one or two note
cards so they do not forget some data such as specific concepts, complicated statistics, or an
important quotation. But definitely, these outlines are not manuscripts in which the speech
is fully written out.