1) “What evidence supports your main idea?” - Discuss your key facts, examples, or data and explain how they strengthen your argument/opinion on your topic. 2) “Where might your audience disagree with you?” Identify a possible disagreement and discuss how you’ll respond to it confidently. 3) What question do you WANT the audience to ask you?” Share a question you’d love to be asked — and explain how you’d answer it. 4) “Ask two deep questions.” - Ask your partner two questions that go beyond the basics (e.g., “How do you know?”, “Why does that matter?”, “What impact does that have?”). 5) “Explain your key message in 20 seconds.” Give a short, sharp explanation of the most important thing you want your audience to know — then discuss how you'll help them learn it. 6) “Talk through your visuals.” Explain what visuals (images, graphs, objects) you plan to use and why they support your message. 7) “Compare your topic to someone else’s.” Find a partner with a different topic and talk about similarities, differences, and connections. 8) Identify 3 thoughtful questions you would ask your audience during or after your presentation. These questions should help you check understanding, encourage discussion, or explore your topic more deeply. 9) “Teach each other a fact.” Teach your partner one important fact from your topic. They must explain it back to you in their own words to show understanding. 10) “Challenge each other’s viewpoints.” Ask your partner a question that challenges their opinion, evidence, or conclusion. They must defend it with reasons.

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