Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking
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Transcript Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking
Chapter Four
Ethical Public
Speaking
Chapter Three
Table of Contents
Ethical Speaking and Responsibility
Values: The Foundation of Ethical
Speaking
Ground Rules for Ethical Speaking
Plagiarism
Ethical Speaking and Responsibility
Ethics: study of moral conduct, or how
people should act toward one another
In public speaking, the responsibilities
speakers have toward their audience and
themselves
Ethical Speaking and Responsibility
Ethics, Ethos, and Speaker Credibility
Free Speech and the Speaker’s
Responsibility
Ethical Speaking and Responsibility:
Ethics, Ethos, and Speaker
Credibility
Ethos : a Greek word meaning
character
Positive Ethos includes
competence, good moral character,
goodwill
Ethical Speaking and Responsibility:
Ethics, Ethos, and Speaker Credibility
Speaker credibility
Believability of speaker
Sound reasoning skills
Honesty
Genuine interest in the
welfare of their listeners
Ethical Speaking and Responsibility:
Free Speech and the Speaker’s
Responsibility
The First Amendment guarantees
freedom of speech.
Fighting words often provoke people to
violence and are not protected under free
speech.
Values: The Foundation of
Ethical Speaking
Values: people’s judgments of what’s
good, bad, and important
They are culturally determined by family,
schools, and religious organizations.
Values: The Foundation of
Ethical Speaking
Value Conflicts and Ethical Dilemmas
Recognizing and Respecting Listener’s
Values
Values: The Foundation of Ethical Speaking:
Value Conflicts and Ethical Dilemmas
The more diverse the society, the greater
these clashes tend to be.
Recognizing audience values is very
important for a speaker.
Values: The Foundation of Ethical Speaking:
Recognizing and Respecting
Listeners’ Values
Identify your listeners’ values, attitudes,
and beliefs to the topic and the occasion.
Use surveys and interviews
Use Milton Rokeach’s model to
conduct a values assessment
Values: The Foundation of Ethical Speaking:
Respecting Listeners’ Values
Milton Rokeach’s model
Terminal values
Desirable in themselves
Instrumental values
Characteristics people possess.
Ground Rules for Ethical
Speaking
Dignity : feeling worthy, honored, or
respected
Integrity: incorruptibility
Dignity and integrity should infuse every
aspect of a speech.
Ground Rules for Ethical
Speaking
Trustworthiness
Respect
Responsibility
Fairness
Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking:
Trustworthiness
Trustworthiness: a combination
of honesty and dependability
Reveal your true purpose.
Avoid misleading, deceptive, or
false information.
Acknowledge sources.
Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking:
Respect
Respect: addressing audience members
as unique human beings
Focuses on issues
Allows the audience the power of rational
choice.
Avoids in-group and out-group distinctions.
Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking:
Respect
Stereotypes: generalizations about an
apparent characteristic of a group that are
applied to all its members
Hate Speech: offensive communication
directed against people’s racial, ethnic,
religious, gender, sexual, or other
characteristics
Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking:
Responsibility
The responsible
speaker considers the
following:
Topic and purpose
Evidence and
reasoning
Accuracy
Honest use of
emotional appeals
Ground Rules For Ethical Speaking:
Fairness
Fairness: a
genuine and
open-minded
attempt to see all
sides of an issue
Plagiarism
Plagiarism: the use of other people’s
ideas or words without acknowledging
the source
Any source that requires credit in
written form should be acknowledged
in oral form.
Plagiarism
Direct Quotations
Paraphrased Information
Plagiarism:
Direct Quotations
Direct quotations: statements
made verbatim (word for word) by
someone else
Plagiarism:
Paraphrased Information
Paraphrase: a restatement of
someone else’s statements, ideas, or
written work in the speaker’s own
words
Plagiarism:
Paraphrased Information
Any data other
than that
gathered by you
should be cited.