What are the three parts of classical speech structure and how are they organized and developed?

   The classical speech structure is very common and has three parts:

   Introduction- We start off by getting our audiences attention and telling them what we are going to talk about.  This first part should be planned very well (See “Introduction” page for more information).
   Main Body- This is the core of the discussion, what we are here to talk about.  This is where we use a few main points, splitting them into sub-points and then solidifying our ideas with “bricks”.  Usually want around 3-5 main points.
   Conclusion- Wrap everything up, remembering your audience of your main points and showing them how it applies to you.
   We can organize our speech into a formal outline, informal outline type it up as you would a paper.
   
When it is time to go and give your presentation, you have many options of using what you have written-


    *Bring your whole speech written out, and basically read it

    *Bring your outline to remember the points you wish

    *Bring some of the quotes you will read or statistics you will cite.

   *Bring one notecard with just your main ideas

   *Bring nothing-know your speech well and be yourself.

To learn more about Speech structure, follow the link

How to Write a Keynote Speech