Course Content

  • The layers of language and related linguistic disciplines (from phonology to semantics and pragmatics)
  • The functions of language (creative, communicative, cognitive, etc.)
  • The Aristotelian principles of Logos, Ethos and Pathos
  • What is ethics? Ethical communication in the age of AI
  • Seminal concepts of pragmatics, communication theory and discourse analysis
  • What we can learn from the most outstanding orators in history - analysis of famous and infamous historical speeches
  • Preparing for a speech: research, rehearsal, delivery
  • Minimizing speaker-side biases while facing listener-side biases
  • The impactful presentation

 

Key Skills

  • Analyzing written speeches for their cohesion and coherence, rhetorical devices, narrative structure, fallacies and biases, authenticity and overall impact
  • Identification and debunking of manipulative techniques, using the adequate linguistic, rhetorical, philosophical and psychological terms
  • Speechwriting and impactful, non-manipulative delivery

 

Course Progression

  1. Theoretical framework: the philosophical and psychological context (4–5 lessons)
  2. Interactive and individual exercises, learning and applying bias-related terms and the methods of text analysis (4-5 lessons)
  3. Active writing practice with tutorial support (parallel with last 3 lessons, individual)
  4. Presentations of speeches with Q&A (1 lesson)
  5. Evaluation (1 lesson)

 

Participants are required to

  • Attend at least 75% of contact lessons (sessions build on each other);
  • Complete at least 75% of home assignments (Quizlet, learning = doing);
  • Deliver an impactful, persuasive but non-manipulative speech on a chosen topic close to the student’s heart and spontaneously answer audience questions related to the speech content.