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Speech
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Speech as an academic subject sits at the intersection of communications, linguistics, rhetoric, and education. Students across composition courses, public speaking classes, communications programs, and language education curricula are regularly asked to engage with it. The topic is academically rich because it encompasses both the craft of oral delivery and the deeper analysis of how language shapes identity, persuasion, and public life. From understanding how political figures construct arguments to examining how speech and language impediments affect individual development, the subject demands critical thinking about communication as a fundamental human ability.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a rhetorical-analytical angle, examining landmark addresses such as Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech or Herbert Hoover's "Rugged Individualism" to understand how a speaker's style reflects rhetorical purpose. Others adopt a policy or legal framework, as seen in treatments of the Central Hudson Test and United States foreign policy. Educational and developmental perspectives also appear strongly, including work on speech and language characteristics in deaf-blind children, literacy assessment tools, and curriculum design for teacher education students. Discourse and conversation analysis represent yet another methodological lens present in this collection.

A strong essay on speech benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one angle — rhetorical, developmental, legal, or historical — rather than trying to cover all of them at once. Evidence drawn from specific texts, case studies, or documented language data tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating speech purely as performance while neglecting the underlying linguistic or social structures that give spoken communication its meaning and power.

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Essay Doctorate
Philosophy as a consolation tool for navigating modern hardships
This paper is an analysis of The Consolations of Philosophy by Alain de Botton. It focuses on the author's analysis of the death of Socrates. De Bottom argues that philosophy's greatest strength is its ability to question conventional wisdom, given that so many of what we regard as 'truths' are really unspoken cultural assumptions. Socrates became unpopular because of his questioning of the definition of values such as piety, courage and virtue.
Research Paper Doctorate
Synchronous and Asynchronous Learning Asynchronous
The objective of this work is to research the categories of 'Synchronous' and 'Asynchronous' e-learning activities and to relate experiential information gained from both aspects.
Essay Doctorate
Industrialization After U.S. Civil War American Industrialization
This paper argues that the increase in American industrialization in the period from 1865 to 1920 was, in some sense, the cause of massive political inequality and unrest, and necessitated the age of reform that would follow. The paper examines the issues of labor exploitation (particularly child labor and convict labor), economic inequality (with the rise of the US Senate as a "millionaire's club" and the 50 years of Republican-party dominance over the political process) and economic instablity (with the Panic of 1873, the Populist movement, and the rise of organized labor). It concludes that industrialization was the cause of all this unrest, and required the rise of reform-minded Presidents like Theodore Roosevelt.
Paper Undergraduate
Hinduism and Buddhism: comparative religious traditions
Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance list a number of areas in which Hinduism differs from other more monotheistic religions in that Hinduism does not have the following:
Essay Doctorate
Texting and driving laws: persuasive speech outline
This is an outline for a speech about the dangers of texting while driving. People who text and drive are far more likely to get into a car accident than people who drive with more attention. Texting while driving is even more dangerous than drunk driving according to some research because it has an even worse impairment on your reaction time.
Essay Masters
Feminism Impact on Liberalism
The document considers the validity of merging "new" ideologies, such as feminism, with "old" ones, such as liberalism. Although valid objections exist to such combinations, the conclusion is that both ideologies have useful components to offer each other. Ultimately, merging the ideologies creates an entity that is more than the sum of its parts.
Research Paper Doctorate
Article summary and key findings
Business Dispute: First Amendment & the Media
Paper Doctorate
Women and masculinity in science fiction literature
Science fiction has always been a masculine genre, no matter that Mary Shelley invented it in her novel Frankenstein. Until fairly recent times, most science fiction writers were men, and they dealt with subjects like technology, power, space battles, featuring male heroes, explorers and adventurers. In film, science fiction has been a perfect subject for ultra-masculine actors like Arnold Schwarzenegger, although Lieutenant Ripley in the Alien trilogy proved that women could be masculine heroes as well and very effective at destroying hostile creatures that threaten humanity. Joe Haldeman's novel Forever Peace certainly fits within this conventional masculine narrative in science fiction, since the story is related by a male narrator named Sergeant Julian Class, an alienated soldier of the First World who opposes his own government and society. He is a class type of alienated and disillusioned male hero who nevertheless hopes that the world can achieve peace and prosperity through better use of technology. Even though it was written thirty years before, Ursula Le Guin's The Left Hand of Darkness is a radical departure from these types of themes and characters, since it takes place on an underdeveloped planet called Gethen far in the future.
Paper Undergraduate
Persuasion Features of Presidential Scandal Speeches
This paper discusses the apology-for-scandal speeches of Clinton, Reagan, and Nixon. It further explains the The Watergate scandal occurred in 1970 because five men were caught at the Democratic National Committee and further investigations led to President Nixon being found guilty of committing fraud. Another fraud that highlighted a President as the causative agent was the Iran Arms and Contra Aid Controversy. This scandal occurred when President Reagan was in the administration and the officials in charge were accused of selling arms to Iran secretly.
Paper Doctorate
Relate President Obama\'s Second Inauguration Speech to the Book
President Obama's "Second Inaugural Address:" Rhetorical analysis