Saturday, September 17, 2011


Awesome work yesterday, everyone!  I heard afterward that quite a lot of people had taken notice and spoken about what we were up to!  This is terrific!

Let's continue this next week! 

For next week, we're working on rhetoric and speeches.

Come in next week with a piece of about one minute that uses the power of speech to raise awareness for a specific social or political issue.  In your groups, you will work on techniques to make the speech better. 

One really good way to write a speech is to imitate a famous speech. 

You might imitate Dr. King's famous I Have a Dream speech, which you read yesterday, and which you can listen to here.  If you did that, you could begin with "I have a dream..." and then go on to explain what *your* dream is. 

Another cool thing to reference and imitate would be the Declaration of Independence (which you all know very well now): "We hold these truths to be self-evident..." What truths do YOU hold to be self evident?

Still another might be the beginning of the Constitution: "We the people..."  What declaration do YOUR people want to make today in 2011?

Or, you could imitate another amazing speech of your choice!

Remember, speeches don't just have to be formal addresses!  Students in the past have done very powerful spoken word (think Def Poetry) pieces as their speeches--feel free to get creative! 

What is required?
-That the speech be one minute long, plus or minus ten seconds.  Rehearse it!
-That the speech be SPOKEN.  Using your mouth.  Formal speech, spoken word, rap, poetry, whatever.
-That the speech serves as a call to action or a complaint about something SPECIFIC that is wrong in the world today--a social or political problem.  Hunger.  Poverty.  The environment.  Jobs.  Violence.  Police brutality.  Prejudice.  Drug abuse.  Rape.  These are just a few of the specific problems you might speak out against.

Surprise, surprise, we're going to work on these in class and then speak them publicly too!

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