Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Oral Communication Week Two.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Oral Communication Week Two."— Presentation transcript:

1 Oral Communication Week Two

2 Question of the Day What is one thing that you do (or could do) to help improve your self-confidence?

3 Giving Presentations Throughout this class, each of you will have a chance to give a presentation With your group, you will create a minute presentation where every member of the group speaks equally You will sign up TODAY in groups of 4 or 5. Write your names and your topic under the date of your presentation

4 Rubric (how your presentations will be graded)
Preparedness Volume Content Speaks Clearly Enthusiasm Posture and Eye Contact Time-Limit Power Point Presentation (see website for details for points in each category)

5 Preparing your Presentation
Organize your presentation like you would a piece of writing Make an outline Share that outline with the audience at the beginning so they know what to expect Keeps your presentation clear and easy to follow

6 Preparing your Presentation
Presentations have the same structure as essays: a beginning, middle, and an end. Make sure one topic leads to the next and use transitions to help things move smoothly

7 Preparing your Presentation
Don’t memorize! Instead, say your presentation out loud or in your mind and write down some key phrases and sentences Create cue cards for your reference Put bullet points of main points or things that are hard to remember Don’t write out everything or you will end up just reading your presentation

8 Preparing your Presentation
Practice! Practice your presentation at least 3 times even if you are alone

9 Using Visuals Use visuals to enhance your visual message, not distract from it…

10 Using Visuals Use words, sentences, symbols, graphs, charts, symbols, pictures, etc. Support your message – use them for a reason Focus on one idea per visual

11 Using Visuals Set the tone with the use of colors and images
Make sure they are legible to the most distant viewers Use colors that complement each other ex. No yellow on white

12 Using Visuals Support your ideas and the flow of your presentation
Change backgrounds to change pace Change backgrounds to introduce a new topic

13 PowerPoint Guidelines
You don’t want to write in sentences on your PowerPoint slides. You don’t want to write out everything you are going to say on each slide. You don’t want to have one giant paragraph that you are just going to read off your slide when it comes up because it is hard to follow and you will lose your listeners before you even get halfway through it because they will be trying to read the slide that you are reading to them and they will not be paying attention to what you are saying.

14 PowerPoint Guidelines
Use 18 point font or larger on a Power Point Limit the number of words per line (6 or 7 maximum) Choose your font carefully Fonts tell the listeners something about you: Times New Roman is formal. Lucida Handwriting is hard to read Don’t use too many fonts (or font sizes) at once

15 PowerPoint Guidelines
Keep everything simple: Colors Animations Transitions Sound Content Pictures

16 PowerPoint Guidelines
Keep your slides consistent Use the same fonts and colors Use the same size text

17 PowerPoint Guidelines
Use Spell Check! Go to “Tools” at the top of your screen and then select “Spelling” Particularly helpful if English is not your first language…

18 Remember! You don’t have to use PowerPoint!
It’s a good tool sometimes, not always.

19 Giving your Presentation
Don’t rely on your slides or your notecards! Interact with your audience Ask questions Give time at the end for them to ask you questions Make eye contact

20 Giving your Presentation
Speak loudly and clearly Don’t speak too slowly or quickly Change the loudness and pace of your voice throughout Don’t talk in monotone

21 Giving your Presentation
Be confident Move around (but not too much) Don’t get tripped up on small grammar errors or “umms”

22 Good Presentation Guidelines
Organize Provide structure and framework to your presentation (an outline) Illustrate Help listeners visualize – tell a story using visuals and charts Repeat Help the audience remember the main ideas by repeating them (audiences only listen 25-50% of the time)

23 Power Poses

24 Power Poses

25 Power Poses What does “Fake it til you make it” mean?
What does Amy Cuddy say about primates behavior? How do power poses influence humans scientifically speaking? What are the different applications of power poses?

26 Next Class Presentations begin! Who is presenting?


Download ppt "Oral Communication Week Two."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google