pretty much write an essay and then trim it down to the essential information. it is a speech, so it has to flow a little more than an essay. try to make concepts and ideas lead into the next a little more than you would in essays.
My english speeches are always my essay for the question with a "
Good morning/afternoon teachers and fellow students" at the beginning and a "Thank you for listening" at the end.
The teacher's don't care about it being interesting, just that you argue your thesis/point well so don't have any meaningless BS in the introduction to make it interesting.
For example, in our last english speech the essays that achieved the highest marks (19s and 20s) didn't have any meaningless BS and those that did got no higher than 17 because they spent too much time going on about nonsense.
Just be sure to make i contact with the audience and you'll be find
IMO, these kind of statements are boring. I mean, everyone says that and really, you dont
really mean it. even if you
did mean it, you did you have it written it down and planned to say it ahead of time?
if you have ever been in the presence of a great speaker, you would know they talk casually infront of a crowd of people, or a class of students and they dont read off palm cards. they know what they are saying. eg, if I told you to talk about your favourite book or game or tv show you would be able to talk about it without having to look at notes, and a speech should be similar. a free flowing one sided conversation about a topic.
so know your speech and be casual. at the very most have your speech summarised into one or two dot points per paragraph, so that you are talking and not looking down at your notes, and just say what you know. maybe pace around a little, that looks really good if you can do it, just a bit though, not too much.