<p>Over the course of several weeks, you will craft a five-paragraph informative essay. This essay is based on a prompt selected by your mentor. There are several steps to creating a well-developed essay. Therefore, you will complete this project through a series of assignments. In this particular assignment, you will select a prompt for your essay, craft your thesis statement, and craft supporting points. Your three choices must have some type of common theme in them. Finding three articles with a common theme will require you to read many of these biographies until you see three that have something in common. Search for your own common theme in the three articles of your choice. What is the common theme between the three articles you have chosen? Remember to list the names of the articles or the names of the persons in your thesis. 1. Download the Five-Paragraph Informative Essay Template. Save it as a .docx or .odt file (this screencast shows you how). 2. Complete Step One - Basic Outline on the template. You will complete the rest of the template in future assignments. 3. Submit your template with Step One completed as a .doc or.docx. If you&#8217;re using Open Office, you can save as a .doc; see this screencast. 4. Save your Five-Paragraph Informative Essay Template in a folder specific to this course. It is imperative that you save this document in a safe place, as you will re-open and edit this template several times. Note: If you do not score at least 85 points on this assignment, please rewrite it and resubmit before moving on to &quot;Informative Essay: Keyword Outline.&quot; This is one of the only assignments this semester in which you can resubmit more than one time. <i>This has been generated by https://essayfreelancewriters.com!</i></p><br /><br /><p>If on the other hand your concern is a product/service as a PRE/Advertiser, or an issue intangible as those handled by spiritual leaders and programme facilitators, seek out beforehand, opinions and opposing views about the product/service/issue. Be sure to find out details about the product/service/issue as to how it functions or implications of every standpoint in an issue. It is only this detailed understanding of subject that places you above your audience to be able to grant answers to their every question, including the ones they are not able to ask. When you have satisfactorily understudied the subject of your presentation, you should as well endeavor to study the people to whom you will be speaking. This may require going the extra mile to study the various groups of people likely to be present at your presentation as well as their depth of understanding of the subject. Also, their depth of understanding of the language of communication is of importance, as this helps your diction for proper understanding. You may as well, need to take a closer look at the place and time of your presentation.</p><br /><p>This was created with the help of Essay Writers !</p><br /><br /><br /><br /><p>Though this may not be of same relevance as the first two, but is advisable because the place and time of an event contribute to a large extent, to the atmosphere of the event and in effective communication, the atmosphere is as important as the message itself as it colours the meaning of a message. This is why &quot;good morning&quot; at a time may be a greeting and at another time, a disturbance, as &quot;yes&quot; may mean yes at time but mean &quot;no&quot; at other times. &#8226; Speech Writing: A well-researched speech may often end up poorly delivered if it is poorly documented, as many speech makers find the Read Only Strategy (ROS) more convenient than any other method. For a speech to be remarkable, its research, documentation and delivery must be sufficiently mastered. Whether commissioned to write a speech for someone else to deliver or not, speech writing requires an interplay of excellent writing skills controlled by specific facts gained through research conducted at the initial stage with appropriate and accurate choice of words and illustrations, analogies etcetera. Here are the basic formats of speech writing: the scripted speech, the semi-scripted speech, the outline speech and the unscripted format.</p><br /><br /><p>Scripted Speech: Earlier I mentioned ROS (Read Only Strategy) which is my description for a speech that is pre written and delivered verbatim unfortunately, this leaves no room for improvisation thus, where the speech writer is different from its presenter, the latter may have little or no idea about the technicalities of the subject of discussion, as he/she only read what is on paper. In this case, questions asked pose a great challenge to the presenter and may often be a source of embarrassment. A person delivering speech using ROS, without sufficient rehearsal may get pronunciations wrong and dodge questions at the end of the exercise as politicians do, because they are hardly involved in the creation of their speeches. However, this is the most used type of speech, practiced by political icons and celebrities because of its convenience. The hugest merit of this is the convenience and the fact that individuals who are extremely shy or incompetent can hide away their weaknesses behind the paper already written for them. Also, the speech presenter may not need to have a deep knowledge of the subject, provided the writer of the speech does a good job.</p><br />