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speech writing worksheet

I created these free speech and language worksheets so you can easily download and print them out to use as part of your speech therapy program.  Just scroll down the page to view the worksheets by topic.  You will find free speech therapy worksheets for articulation, vocabulary , grammar, holiday articulation and language games…and lots of other miscellaneous speech therapy creations that I love!  If you would like more information on what articulation therapy is you might like to read a post I have written called  Teaching Speech Sounds: The Process of Traditional Articulation Therapy

Parents:  If you are a mommy or a daddy (or grandma or grandpa) who wants to work with your child at home, you can use these speech therapy activity pages for extra practice.  Just choose the sound position to work on (initial, medial, or final) and click on the corresponding link to view and print the worksheets.  To help make practice more fun, you can print out two of the same page so you have pairs, cut them out, and use them to play a game of memory or go fish. You can also use them as flashcards.  You will find free speech therapy worksheets by sound and at a variety of levels; word level, phrase level and sentence levels!

Articulation Worksheets

Speech Sounds in Syllable Wheel

speech writing worksheet

/th/ Sound Voiceless

speech writing worksheet

/th/ Sound Voiced

speech writing worksheet

Grammar Worksheets

Regular past tense.

speech writing worksheet

Irregular Past Tense

speech writing worksheet

Third Person Singular

speech writing worksheet

Vocabulary Worksheets – Holiday and Seasonal Themed 

Fall & autumn memory game, christmas vocabulary 1, christmas vocabulary 2, summer vocabulary, summer vocabulary companion, grammar bingo games – holiday and seasonal themed, grammar bingo games.

speech writing worksheet

Vocabulary BINGO Games – Holiday and Seasonal Themed

Vocabulary bingo - winter, concepts bingo - christmas, conceptual vocabulary bingo - back-to-school, conceptual vocabulary bingo - fall, conceptual vocabulary bingo - spring & easter, lemonade stand bingo - summer, 4th of july vocabulary bingo - summer.

speech writing worksheet

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Speech writing

I can write an engaging speech using effective devices.

Lesson details

Key learning points.

  • Use of direct address and personal pronouns reflect the live context of speech-making.
  • Discourse markers and interjections add a spoken quality to speech-writing.
  • Various repetition devices, such as anaphora and refrain, are used in speech-writing to drive a message.
  • Aural devices, such as alliteration and onomatopoeia, make meaning through sound in the spoken quality of speeches.

Common misconception

My writing should be the same whether I am writing a speech, opinion piece or letter.

Speeches require a different approach. The best speeches are those that reflect regular speaking patterns and sound more natural as a result. Interjections, direct address and personal pronouns will all help achieve this.

Direct address - when you speak to or address an audience directly (e.g. ‘you’)

Discourse markers - words and phrases that manage and organise the structure of your writing (e.g. ‘firstly’)

Interjection - a word or phrase used as an exclamation to show emphasis or emotion (e.g. ‘alas’)

Anaphora - when a word or phrase is repeated at the beginning of a number of sentences or clauses

Refrain - a word or phrase that is repeated several times in a piece of writing

Content guidance

  • Contains conflict or violence.

Supervision

Adult supervision suggested.

This content is © Oak National Academy Limited ( 2024 ), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).

Starter quiz

6 questions.

Question and Answer forum for K12 Students

Speech Writing for Class 8 CBSE

Speech Writing for Class 8 CBSE Format, Examples, Topics, Exercises

A speech is used to convey information orally to a number of people. The purpose of a speech is:

  • to convince the listeners about the speaker’s point of view
  • to pass on a wide range of information
  • to express an opinion, share a point of view, experience, observation, etc.

Basic  English Grammar  rules can be tricky. In this article, we’ll get you started with the basics of sentence structure, punctuation, parts of speech, and more.

Speech Writing Class 8 Format, Examples, Topics, Exercises PDF

Parts of a speech

  • Salutation: This is where the speaker greets the chief guests, fellow speakers and audience.
  • Key sentence: It is the central theme or the key issue of the speech. Since this introduces your speech, it should be catchy.
  • Body: You will need supporting data to make the speech credible and interesting. This should reflect clarity of thought, accuracy of facts and a balanced view, unless it is a debate that calls for an one-sided stand.
  • Conclusion: It should be brief, consolidate ideas, personal observations and predictions, with a catchy and striking end.
  • Thanking the audience: One needs to thank the audience at the end of the speech.

Format of a speech

  • Opening statement (Good Morning …)
  • Statement of problem
  • Causes of problem
  • Suggestions
  • Concluding remarks

Parts of a speech and Format of a speech

  • Use simple language and involve the audience.
  • Do not exceed the word limit.

A speech is merely a one-sided discussion, in which one person constructs a talk on a given topic and presents it to an audience.

A debate, on the other hand, is a discussion between opposing sides. In a debate, you present viewpoint within a given time slot. One gets some time for each side to cross-examine the other, which is the rebuttal round.

Starting • Chairperson, Members of the Jury, Teachers and my dear friends

  • I strongly support/reject/oppose the motion …
  • Firstly, speaking for/against the topic …
  • My worthy opponent has just pointed out … But I feel
  • Although my opponent may feel …
  • Summing up …
  • Finally, I would like to say that …

Writing task A. Your school is celebrating the “Save Earth Week’. You have to give a speech in the morning assembly on the topic ‘Save Earth, Save Life’. Use the prompts given below to write the speech.

  • natural resources depleting every day
  • dumping waste indiscriminately
  • pollution—land, water, air, noise, light
  • resulting in diseases/ill-health
  • flora and fauna perishing
  • need to wake up before it’s too late
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Answer: Encourage the students to use their creativity and formulate their own answers.

Save Earth, Save Life

Earth is our home, and we have nowhere else to live. Mother earth is our nurturer and our nourisher. However, the truth is that our mother is in a deplorable state. Yes, environmental changes are real. Everything that we do, all of our activities, affect the environment. Some of this is inevitable, and there’s not much we can do about it. But most of this is caused by our callousness and unbounded greed. Our natural resources are depleting day by day. And we must ensure that we leave it intact for our future generations.

Sustainable development is the need of the hour. We must plant more trees and find more sustainable alternatives to the use of fossil fuels such as coal, petroleum and diesel. Reforestation should be encouraged, and deforestation should be penalized. Growth should not happen at the cost of our environment. We need to spread awareness on this matter at the grassroots levels. We must save our planet earth by saving our trees, natural vegetation, natural resources, water and electricity. Measures must be taken for controlling environmental pollution and global warming.

We need to reduce our use of paper, and also recycle it whenever we can. The use, of air conditioners, should be minimized, and electricity should never be wasted. Water pollution should also be kept in check by not throwing garbage in our water bodies. We must strive for safe and pure drinking water. Industries should ensure that their pollution level is always under control, and huge penalties must be laid on those who produce pollution levels beyond the permissible limits. Industry waste should also be treated carefully and then disposed off.

It is high time that we become aware of what we are doing to our environment. We need to take small steps individually to have a larger effect on our environment.

Writing task

B. School uniforms are an important point of discussion these days. While some feel that they help maintain discipline and uniformity, some feel that they curtail a child’s right to freedom of expression. As the head boy/head girl, write for or against the topic—Uniforms Make Schools Better’. You can use the table given below to express your point of view.

Uniforms Make Schools Better—For the Topic

It is a truth universally acknowledged that nobody would like to dress in the same kind of clothes every day. It is not exciting to wear the same shirt, blazer and tie day after day. But uniforms are not the drag that we make them out to be. The idea of a school uniform is neither new, nor exciting. But wearing it is like wearing a badge of honour, and should be a matter of pride for the students. It fills them with a sense of belongingness to a particular school or educational institute. It is often the first element of our identity in the outer world.

It shows that we identify with and endorse the values that a particular school or institute espouses. Uniforms teach a person to take pride in the identity that they have created. It helps each student to express their inner personality freely, and reduces dependence on their looks. It helps reduce peer pressure, because there is no competition to look better than the other person or follow the latest trend. It helps foster equality among all students and dispels groupism.

It helps reduce distraction among students, and helps them concentrate on what is actually important—their academic performance. It also helps in preventing bullying because of how someone dresses. Having a uniform can be a safety net for many students who might otherwise suffer from bullying. A strict uniform inculcates discipline among students, helping maintain a sense of order at school. Not only this, it makes it easier to identify intruders, thus making school a safe haven for all.

It also makes it easy for the students to dress up in the morning, and makes one look smart and dapper. School uniform isn’t fashionable, but that’s exactly why I think it should be here to stay.

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84 comments.

Thank you so much. This has truly helped me in my exams and throughout the beneficial journey of my school year.

Ellen Davis

How will I be able to check my work, when I print it out to work on them? Where are the answers?

I guess it depends on what you are working on. On what are you working?

Kareema Coles

Ummm the pdf version is not working…is the link still valid?

Which link?

This is an amazing website with fabulous ideas and printable ready to go lessons!!! Thank you so much! I wish I could meet you!!!

Thank you very much for this amazing resource and great ideas. They are extremely comprehensive and well designed. Thank you very much for your kind consideration and not adding a Price-tag to your valuable resources. Highly appreciated.

Sandra Conner

Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and your work with us. As teachers, we are always in need of fresh material. I teach college level creative writing classes, and your worksheets help my students. Sometimes I change the essay topics to fit their particular age group or interest, but having these examples laid out for us and made available for use in our classrooms is wonderful.

Lifesaver! Thank you for the great ideas and guidance. I am a new teacher, and finding this site has made a true turn around in my instruction. Thank you, thank you, thank you!!!

Thank you for these great step by step resources

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Despite all the negative comments above, you should keep up for the ones (like me) who are absolutely grateful for these material.

Thanks for sharing! Best.

I give this website 3stares only for the info but in general 1star

I give your comment 0 stars because your position lacks support or evidence of any kind. Complete some of these worksheets and begin your argument again.

that’s stupid from where do u get the worksheets

I wrote them.

I did not see any activities that required the student to write an entire essay.

https://www.ereadingworksheets.com/writing/persuasive-essay-topics/

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Thank you for this information! They helped me in my exam so much!

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There’s always next year…

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Persuasive Writing: Full Scheme & Resources

Persuasive Writing: Full Scheme & Resources

Subject: English

Age range: 11-14

Resource type: Worksheet/Activity

Jamestickle86's Shop

Last updated

27 August 2017

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Analyzing Famous Speeches as Arguments

Analyzing Famous Speeches as Arguments

  • Resources & Preparation
  • Instructional Plan
  • Related Resources

Traditionally, teachers have encouraged students to engage with and interpret literature—novels, poems, short stories, and plays. Too often, however, the spoken word is left unanalyzed, even though the spoken word has the potential to alter our space just as much than the written. After gaining skill through analyzing a historic and contemporary speech as a class, students will select a famous speech from a list compiled from several resources and write an essay that identifies and explains the rhetorical strategies that the author deliberately chose while crafting the text to make an effective argument. Their analysis will consider questions such as What makes the speech an argument?, How did the author's rhetoric evoke a response from the audience?, and Why are the words still venerated today?

Featured Resources


: Students use this interactive tool to help them track their notes they take in preparation for their essay.

: Students use this worksheet to examine and answer questions regarding their peer's essay.

: This rubric is used as a guide for students as they are writing their essay, and for teachers to use as a grading tool.

From Theory to Practice

Nearly everything we read and hear is an argument. Speeches are special kinds of arguments and should be analyzed as such. Listeners should keep in mind the context of the situation involving the delivery and the audience-but a keen observer should also pay close attention to the elements of argument within the text. This assignment requires students to look for those elements.

"Since rhetoric is the art of effective communication, its principles can be applied to many facets of everyday life" (Lamb 109). It's through this lesson that students are allowed to see how politicians and leaders manipulate and influence their audiences using specific rhetorical devices in a manner that's so effective that the speeches are revered even today. It's important that we keep showing our students how powerful language can be when it's carefully crafted and arranged.

Further Reading

Common Core Standards

This resource has been aligned to the Common Core State Standards for states in which they have been adopted. If a state does not appear in the drop-down, CCSS alignments are forthcoming.

State Standards

This lesson has been aligned to standards in the following states. If a state does not appear in the drop-down, standard alignments are not currently available for that state.

NCTE/IRA National Standards for the English Language Arts

  • 3. Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning and of other texts, their word identification strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
  • 4. Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions, style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for different purposes.
  • 5. Students employ a wide range of strategies as they write and use different writing process elements appropriately to communicate with different audiences for a variety of purposes.
  • 7. Students conduct research on issues and interests by generating ideas and questions, and by posing problems. They gather, evaluate, and synthesize data from a variety of sources (e.g., print and nonprint texts, artifacts, people) to communicate their discoveries in ways that suit their purpose and audience.

Materials and Technology

  • ReadWriteThink Notetaker
  • Teacher Background and Information Sheet
  • Student Assignment Sheet
  • List of Speeches for Students
  • Queen Elizabeth I’s Speech with Related Questions
  • Historical Speech Research Questions
  • Peer Response Handout
  • Essay Rubric

This website contains audio of the Top 100 speeches of all time.

Included on this site is audio of famous speeches of the 20th century, as well as information about the speeches and background information on the writers.

The "Great Speeches Collection" from The History Place are available here in print and in audio.

This website includes information on finding and documenting sources in the MLA format.

Preparation

  • Review the background and information sheet for teachers to familiarize yourself with the assignment and expectations.  Consider your students' background with necessary rhetorical terms such as claims, warrants, the appeals (logos, pathos, ethos), and fallacies; and rhetorical devices such as tone, diction, figurative language, repetition, hyperbole, and understatement. The lesson provides some guidance for direct instruction on these terms, but there are multiple opportunities for building or activating student knowledge through modeling on the two speeches done as a class.
  • Check the links to the online resources (in Websites section) make sure that they are still working prior to giving out this assignment.
  • Decide whether you want to allow more than one student to analyze and write about the same speech in each class.
  • Look over the  List of Speeches for Students to decide if there are any that you would like to add.
  • Look over the suggested Essay Rubric and determine the weights you would like to assign to each category.  For example, you might tell students that Support and Research may be worth three times the value of Style. Customize the Essay Rubric to meet the learning goals for your students.
  • Reserve the library for Session Three so the students can do research on their speeches.
  • President Obama’s Inauguration Speech.
  • Former President Bush’s Defends War in Iraq Speech.
  • Former President Bush’s 9/11 Speech.
  • Former President Clinton’s “I Have Sinned” Speech.

Student Objectives

Students will

  • analyze a speech for rhetorical devices and their purpose.
  • identify an author’s purposeful manipulation of language.
  • identify elements of argument within a speech.
  • write an analysis of a speech with in-text documentation.

Session One

  • Begin the lesson by asking students what needs to be present in order for a speech to occur. Though the question may seem puzzling—too hard, or too simple—at first, students will eventually identify, as Aristotle did, the need for a speaker, a message, and an audience.
  • The class should discuss audience and the importance of identifying the audience for speeches, since they occur in particular moments in time and are delivered to specific audiences. This is a good time to discuss the Rhetorical Triangle (Aristotelian Triad) or discuss a chapter on audience from an argumentative textbook. You may wish to share information from the ReadWriteThink.org lesson Persuasive Techniques in Advertising and  The Rhetorical Triangle from The University of Oklahoma.
  • Next distribute Queen Elizabeth’s speech to the troops at Tilbury and use the speech and its historical context as a model for the processes students will use on the speech they select. Provide a bit of background information on the moment in history.
  • Then, as a class, go over  Queen Elizabeth’s speech and discuss the rhetorical devices in the speech and the purpose for each one. Adjust the level of guidance you provide, depending on your students' experiences with this type of analysis. The questions provide a place to start, but there are many other stylistic devices to discuss in this selection.

Discuss the audience and the author’s manipulation of the audience. Consider posing questions such as

  • This is a successful speech.  Why?
  • Elizabeth uses all of the appeals – logos, pathos, and ethos – to convince all of her listeners to fight for her from the loyal follower to the greedy mercenary.  How?
  • The tone shifts throughout the selection.  Where?  But more importantly, why?
Martin Luther King, Jr. uses an appeal to pathos in his “I Have a Dream” speech through his historical allusion to Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation: “Five score years ago, a great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stand today, signed the Emancipation Proclamation. This momentous decree came as a great beacon light of hope to millions of Negro slaves who had been seared in the flames of withering injustice. It came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of their captivity.” This is particularly effective for his audience of people sympathetic to the cause of African American men and women who would have been especially moved by this particular reference since it had such a significant impact on the lives of African Americans.

Session Two

  • Continue the work from the previous session by distributing the  Analyzing Famous Speeches as Arguments handout and discussing the assignment and what it requires. See the  background and information sheet for teachers for more details.
  • Tell students they will be getting additional practice with analyzing a speech as an argument by showing a short  10-minute clip of a presidential speech . Ask students to think about how the particular moment in history and the national audience contribute to the rhetorical choices made by the speaker.
  • Lead a discussion of the speech as an argument with regard to purpose and intent. Work with students to identify warrants, claims, and appeals.
  • Ask students to consider how the author manipulates the audience using tone, diction, and stylistic devices. What rhetorical devices aided the author’s manipulation of his audience? Discuss a particular rhetorical device that the President used and the purpose it served.
  • Share the Essay Rubric and explain to students the expectations for success on this assignment.
  • Allow students to select a speech from the List of Speeches for Students . If they wish to preview any of the speeches, they can type the speaker's name and the title of the speech into a search engine and should have little difficulty finding it.

Session Three

  • Take the students to the library and allow them to research their speeches. They should locate their speech and print a copy for them to begin annotating for argumentative structure and rhetorical devices.
  • What was the speaker up against?  What is the occasion for the speech?
  • What did the author have to keep in mind when composing the text?  
  • What were his or her goals?  
  • What was his or her ultimate purpose?  
  • What was his or her intent?
  • Remind students that the writer of the speech is sometimes not the person who delivered the speech, for example, and this will surprise some students. Many people assume that the speaker (president, senator, etc.) is always the writer, and that’s not always the case, so ask your students to check to see who wrote the speech. (They might be surprised at the answer. There’s always a story behind the composition of the speech.)
  • Help students find the author of the speech because this will challenge some students. Oftentimes, students assume the speaker is the author, and that’s sometimes not the case. Once the speechwriter is identified, it is easier to find information on the speech. Help students find the history behind the speech without getting too bogged down in the details. They need to understand the climate, but they do not need to be complete experts on the historical details in order to understand the elements of the speech.
  • If they wish, students can use the ReadThinkWrite Interactive Notetaker to help them track their notes for their essays. Remind them that their work cannot be saved on this tool and should be printed by the end of the session so they can use it in future work.
  • For Session Four, students must bring a thesis, an outline, and all of their research materials to class for a workday. Remind them to refer to the Analyzing Famous Speeches as Arguments , the Essay Rubric , and any notes they may have taken during the first two sessions as they begin their work.
  • The thesis statement should answer the following question: What makes this speech an effective argument and worthy of making this list?

Session Four

  • Set up students in heterogeneous groups of four. Ask students to share their outlines and thesis statements.
  • Go around to check and to monitor as students share their ideas and progress. The students will discuss their speeches and their research thus far.
  • Have students discuss the elements of an argument that they plan on addressing.
  • Finally, have students work on writing their papers by writing their introductions with an enticing “grab” or “hook.” If time permits, have students share their work. 
  • For Session Five, students should bring in their papers. This session would happen in about a week.

Session Five

  • In this session, students will respond each other's drafts using the Peer Response Handout .
  • Determine and discuss the final due date with your students. Direct students to Diana Hacker’s MLA site for assistance with their citations if necessary. 
  • Remind students that their work will be evaluate using the essay rubric .  They should use the criteria along with the comments from their peer to revise and polish their work.
  • During the process of analyzing  Queen Elizabeth I’s Speech , consider showing the related scene from the film Elizabeth: The Golden Age . Though the text of the speech is drastically cut and altered, seeing one filmmaker's vision for the scene may help reinforce the notion of historical context and the importance of audience.
  • Allow students to read and/or perform parts of the speeches out loud. Then, they can share some of their thinking about the argumentative structure and rhetorical devices used to make the speech effective. This activity could happen as part of the prewriting process or after essays have been completed.
  • Require students to write a graduation speech or a speech on another topic. They can peruse print or online news sources to select a current event that interests them.  Have them choose an audience to whom they would deliver an argumentative speech.

Student Assessment / Reflections

  • After peer response has taken place, use the essay rubric to provide feedback on student work. You may change the values of the different categories/requirements to better suit the learning goals for your classroom.
  • Calendar Activities
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Students explore the ways that powerful and passionate words communicate the concepts of freedom, justice, discrimination, and the American Dream in Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech.

While drafting a literary analysis essay (or another type of argument) of their own, students work in pairs to investigate advice for writing conclusions and to analyze conclusions of sample essays. They then draft two conclusions for their essay, select one, and reflect on what they have learned through the process.

Useful for a wide variety of reading and writing activities, this outlining tool allows students to organize up to five levels of information.

This strategy guide clarifies the difference between persuasion and argumentation, stressing the connection between close reading of text to gather evidence and formation of a strong argumentative claim about text.

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Grammar and Writing Workbook for Grade 1

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Grammar and Writing Worksheets

Writing skills for k-5.

Use these free, printable grammar and writing worksheets to study basic grammar including parts of speech (nouns, verbs, ....), capitalization, punctuation and the proper writing of sentences, paragraphs and longer texts. Included are exercises and writing prompts for narrative, opinion and informational writing.

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Conditionals, Relatives, Passives, Reported Speech

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Miembro desde hace

Some exercises to practice some of the most important grammar content in English. 

-In the REPORTED SPEECH EXERCISE, when you need to write a person after TOLD, write ME! (Person TOLD ME) and after SAID, don't write THAT!

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speech writing worksheet

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COMMENTS

  1. LESSON: WRITING INTRODUCTIONS

    WEBA good intro includes four crucial parts: Attention Getting Device (AGD) Issue Statement. Thesis. Roadmap. Each part has an individual purpose and contributes to setting the stage for the rest of the speech. The first step is to show the students a completed intro that contains all four components.

  2. PDF LESSON: WRITING INTRODUCTIONS

    audience the order of the speech without mentioning a vehicle for the AGD in your roadmap or transitions. It is a common practice used by advanced speakers, but it is not required. At the middle school level, it is reasonable to write a roadmap like the example above without the vehicle (metaphor) because you are still learning how to write a ...

  3. Free Worksheets

    Free Worksheets. I created these free speech and language worksheets so you can easily download and print them out to use as part of your speech therapy program. Just scroll down the page to view the worksheets by topic. You will find free speech therapy worksheets for articulation, vocabulary , grammar, holiday articulation and language games ...

  4. PDF Writing a speech

    The ways you use language and vocabulary when writing the words of a speech will depend on the audience the purposeand you are writing for ; for example, in a speech to a group of teachers and parents giving your views on a recent proposal, formal language is most appropriate. Tips for writing a speech . Language - think about: •

  5. Write a Speech Guide : English ESL worksheets pdf & doc

    Write a Speech Guide. mintsy. 2334. 49. 23. 0. 1/1. A guide for writing a speech. It took about 1 1/2 hours to write and give speeches in a class of 10 adult intermediates.

  6. Speech Writing

    Speech writing is the method of conveying a thought or message to a reader using the correct punctuation and expression. Speech writing isn't much different from any other form of narrative writing. There are8 parts of speech in the English language. These parts are nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, and ...

  7. Writing a speech

    docx, 26.72 KB. docx, 28.11 KB. pptx, 342.58 KB. doc, 27 KB. Lessons designed to assist GCSE students with writing a speech. The first lesson generates some discussion and recognition of features of a speech, with the second lesson focusing on the students creating their own speech. This was designed for IGCSE but can be used for any sessions.

  8. Lesson: Speech writing

    This lesson includes breaking down lots of student work (e.g. parts of speeches). You may wish to revisit a recent speech students have written throughout - improving it in response to the learning cycles in the lesson. Teacher tip. Content guidance. Contains conflict or violence.

  9. Speech Writing for Class 8 CBSE Format, Examples, Topics, Exercises

    Speech Writing Class 8 Format, Examples, Topics, Exercises PDF. Parts of a speech. Salutation: This is where the speaker greets the chief guests, fellow speakers and audience. Key sentence: It is the central theme or the key issue of the speech. Since this introduces your speech, it should be catchy. Body: You will need supporting data to make ...

  10. Speech writing worksheet

    Speech Writing exercise for English Year 6 page 98. Liveworksheets transforms your traditional printable worksheets into self-correcting interactive exercises that the students can do online and send to the teacher.

  11. Persuasive speech writing

    Persuasive speech writing. Subject: English. Age range: 11-14. Resource type: Lesson (complete) File previews. pptx, 9.04 MB. docx, 13.47 KB. Lesson that encourages students to write a persuasive speech using examples and techniques. Also focusses on using different sentence types and topic sentences.

  12. Writing a Dialogue KS2

    Writing direct speech challenges KS2 children to think about their writing from different perspectives and consider the purpose of a text. This Direct Speech Writing Worksheet can be used to practice turning sentences into direct speech using proper punctuation and sentence structure. This is a lovely exercise to build children's confidence in using direct speech and formatting before they go ...

  13. Persuasive Essay Worksheets & Activities

    Arguing Both Sides Worksheet 2 - Here's another persuasive essay worksheet to help students practice approaching writing prompts logically. In this double-sided worksheet students practice arguing both sides of a selection of topics. This helps students learn to be strategic when approaching a topic, instead of responding emotionally.

  14. 13 WRITING A SPEECH English ESL worksheets pdf & doc

    Scary Stories. This is a creative writing worksheet. Read some ghost stories with your students, play some scary background music and really create an atmosphere. Then, it's their tu... 2108 uses. A selection of English ESL writing a speech printables.

  15. Teaching Pack: Using & Punctuating Speech KS2 (teacher made)

    Included is an inverted commas punctuation poster, speech sentence order cards and editable speech bubble cards. Ideal for Years 3-6 students, it features everything you need to get your KS2 students punctuating direct and indirect speech correctly. This punctuating speech KS2 teaching pack is teacher-made to ensure your students receive high ...

  16. Grammar & Writing Worksheets by Topic

    K5 Learning offers free worksheets, flashcards and inexpensive workbooks for kids in kindergarten to grade 5. Become a member to access additional content and skip ads. Worksheets focused on the parts of speech and writing proper sentences, paragraphs and longer texts. Writing prompts and exercises for narrative, informative and opinion writing.

  17. Persuasive Writing: Full Scheme & Resources

    17 lesson scheme of work on persuasive writing: speeches, informal letters, formal letters & articles (KS3/KS4)

  18. 519 Top "Speech Writing" Teaching Resources curated for you

    Direct Speech Differentiated Writing Worksheet (Raider's Peril) 7 reviews. School Council Election Candidate Speech Writing Frame 6 reviews. Writing Speech Display Posters 5 reviews. Woodland Animal Speech Bubble Writing Frames 1 review. Speech - Writing (Exam Question) National Writing Day: Acceptance Speech Writing.

  19. FREE!

    This teaching resource guides students on how to create a persuasive speech through writing. Your students will write an introduction, three points, and a conclusion, while being encouraged to use speech techniques such as metaphors, repetition, rhetorical questions, etc. Have your students present their speeches after they finish writing them!

  20. FREE!

    This teaching resource guides students on how to write a persuasive speech. Your students will write an introduction, three points, and a conclusion, while being encouraged to use speech techniques such as metaphors, repetition, rhetorical questions, etc. Simple, but clear and useful for the first lesson on persuasive speech.

  21. Speech Writing Guide PDF Template

    This Speech Writing Guide PDF is just one option when it comes to public speaking. There are a wide range of Twinkl resources on writing speeches persuasively, so you'll have lots of options to choose from. Try one of the following resources: This Public Speaking Checklist is a chance to make sure that everything has been done right when you ...

  22. Analyzing Famous Speeches as Arguments

    Peer Response Handout: Students use this worksheet to examine and answer questions regarding their peer's essay. Essay Rubric: This rubric is used as a guide for students as they are writing their essay, ... Require students to write a graduation speech or a speech on another topic. They can peruse print or online news sources to select a ...

  23. Grammar and Writing Worksheets

    Writing skills for K-5. Use these free, printable grammar and writing worksheets to study basic grammar including parts of speech (nouns, verbs, ....), capitalization, punctuation and the proper writing of sentences, paragraphs and longer texts. Included are exercises and writing prompts for narrative, opinion and informational writing. Grammar & writing by grade:

  24. Conditionals, Relatives, Passives, Reported Speech

    From worksheet author: Some exercises to practice some of the most important grammar content in English. IMPORTANT!-In the REPORTED SPEECH EXERCISE, when you need to write a person after TOLD, write ME! (Person TOLD ME) and after SAID, don't write THAT! Otros contenidos:

  25. 513 Top "Speech Writing" Teaching Resources curated for you

    Direct Speech Differentiated Writing Worksheet (Raider's Peril) 7 reviews. School Council Election Candidate Speech Writing Frame 6 reviews. Writing Speech Display Posters 5 reviews. Woodland Animal Speech Bubble Writing Frames 1 review. Presidential Speech Writing Worksheet.