1.  Inherency:  a type of barrier that prevents a problem from being solved
2.  Extemporaneous: a speech in which participant has 30 minutes to prepare
3.  Impromptu: A speech in which the participant has 7 minutes to prepare
4.  Narrative: a speech in which a story is being told or read
5.  Descriptive: using your 5 senses in a speech
6.  Persuasive: a speech to convince
7.  bandwagon: the belief you should do something because the majority is doing it
8.  Emotional Appeal:  appealing to one's emotions to take your side
9.  Appeal to Action:  a speech that motivates the audience to work towards the speaker's objectives
10.  Fallacy: a Latin term meaning trick, deceit, or fraud
11.  Post Hoc:  Stating that one event cause another because the cause happened before the defect
12.  Ad Hominem:  a claim or argument is rejected on the basis of some irrelevant fact about the author or person giving the speech.  This is an attack on the person and his argument
13.  Equivocation:  a term being used in an argument with 2 or more meanings
14.  False Dichotomy: also called false dilemma; the fallacy that only 2 solutions exist to solve a problem when there are actually more
15.  Straw Man:  ignoring a person's position and replacing with a distorted, exaggerated, or misrepresented version of the claim

Monday: define using notes
Tuesday: multiple choice
Wednesday: matching
Thursday: define from memory