Graduation Speech Outline

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Writing
Name
Date
Graduation Speech Outline
I.
Introduction
A. Hook: A sentence or two that puts the listener on the scene with strong sensory
details. Don’t focus solely on the physical description; specifically try to help the
listener feel your experience emotionally.
B. Thesis (optional): In two to three sentences, state the purpose of your speech: your
personal truth or life lesson and its application as a universal truth or statement
about life or human nature (may be omitted if it interrupts the flow).
II.
Body of Speech
A. The Incident – What Happened? Describe the Moment.
1. Establish the setting – SHOW, don’t tell!
2. Clearly state who was involved
3. What was said by whom? Recreating dialogue is very effective. What thoughts
were going through your mind? What did you experience with your five senses?
4. Clearly show your initial reaction to the moment. How did you feel? How did
you respond?
B. What did you learn? Examine the incident from a variety of angles.
1. What lesson did you learn at the specific moment? Or maybe you didn’t learn
anything from it at first – that’s fine, too.
2. How did the lesson immediately – or gradually – evolve for you? In other
words, how did this experience transform from a chance happening to some
broader context? What other meanings, interpretations, or ideas revealed
themselves to you as you reflected upon the experience? A simile, metaphor, or
analogy might be appropriate here.
3. Were there any other similar experiences you had had, or some that you knew
others had gone through, that you connected to your own? If so, try to
incorporate this “connection.”
C. How has the experience and subsequent reflection changed you personally?
1. How have your actions or your behavior changed as a result of your experience?
Provide specific, meaningful examples.
2. How has your view on life changed as a result? What’s your new credo?
D. What is the universal truth you discovered from your experience?
1. How will your newfound awareness affect your future decision-making and the
way you treat others?
2. How might this lesson apply to all of us, and specifically your classmates as you
move on to the challenges of high school? Avoid sounding too preachy or
“holier than thou.”
III.
Conclusion – Closing thoughts: Your challenge is not to repeat anything you’ve said so
far. Give some fresh insight. This could take the form of advice to others. You could
use a quotation from a famous or not-so-famous person or a poem. Definitely, however,
you must restate your universal truth.

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