So here's the rundown....
Limited Preparation
Impromptu: Participants are given a 7 minute period in which to prepare and perform a speech dealing with claims suggested by the topic, usually quotations, occassionally a word or object.
example: "I don't need to learn English, I'll never go to England" - Homer Simpson... now prepare.
Extemporaneous Speaking: Competitors are given a 30 minute time period to a response to a chosen topic, usually based on politics of some sort.
example: Should the United States bomb Iraq into oblivion?
Public Address
(all events have a 10 minute time limit)
Persuasion: Students attempt to guide the
audience into changing a behavior, belief, or realizing that something
is very, very bad.
example: Americans are drinking unsafe water.
Informative: Competitors attempt to introduce a topic to the audience that is either new or an innovation on an old process.
example: new uses of the apple in treating cancer
After Dinner Speaking (ADS): Students attempt to draw attention to a particular problem and use humor to encourage the audience to take a stance, do something, and hopefully laugh.
example: alien paranoia is destroying America, even Alaska and Hawaii
Rhetorical Criticism (also known as Communication Analysis): Students examine an artifact using a particular communication method and draw conclusions based on this artifact.
example: tobacco ads displaying Joe Camel (okay, so it's a little old)
Interpretation
(all events have a 10 minute time limit)
Prose: Interpretation of a short story,
combination of stories, or a larger work cut for performance. These don't
always have to be in the third person.
example: War and Peace, the abridged version
Poetry: Interpretation of a poem, or a selection of poems that center around a particular theme.
example: Shel Silverstein poems
Duo: Interpretation of a dramatic work, obviously done by two people. Either serious or humorous, usually both.
example: Agnes of God
Dramatic Interpretation (DI): Interpretation of a dramatic or humorous work performed by a single person.
example: Night Mother
Programmed Oral Interpretation (POI): A multigenre (prose, poetry, drama and media material) performance based around a central theme, individual, etc...
example: Ike Turner