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Presentation Skills ENC 3254 Speaking & Writing for Premed Students.

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Presentation on theme: "Presentation Skills ENC 3254 Speaking & Writing for Premed Students."— Presentation transcript:

1 Presentation Skills ENC 3254 Speaking & Writing for Premed Students

2 Presentations are expensive. Consider whether it is really necessary. Cost in salaries of audience Cost in time for presentation Cost in time to prepare presentation

3 Presenter can read audience and react A B C C D Presenter receives instant reaction ! ? ! ? Presentations have advantages over documents Work can come alive for audience Work

4 Speaker has limited chance to catch errors ??? Audience cannot reread text has one audience chance to hear Audience cannot look up background material Presentations also have disadvantages

5 Informative Speech Assignment

6 What are the most common public speaking challenges? Anxiety Lack of preparation time Not knowing your purpose Not knowing the audience

7 Communication Apprehension The Book of Lists ranks fear of public speaking as the #1 fear, even ahead of death, disease, and nuclear war. A 2001 Gallup Poll found that public speaking was second only to a fear of snakes. But….is it Genetic? Or a Learned Behavior? Is it Trait or State CA?

8 What are the causes of CA? Fear of Embarrassment Fear of Failure Fear of Rejection Fear of the Unknown or Why should we be scared?

9 Overcoming or Controlling CA Choose your topic Know your environment Breathe & Relax Use extras wisely Get the audience’s attention early Know your material & practice Make eye contact with your audience Don’t be afraid to make mistakes Put in the situation into perspective & welcome the experience

10 Presentations can be viewed from three stylistic perspectives Structure and Speech Delivery Archives, Cal-Tech Visual Aids

11 Structure and Speech Visual Aids Delivery Archives, Cal-Tech

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13 audience purposeoccasion Begin preparing a scientific presentation by analyzing your constraints Who are they? What do they know? Why are they here? What biases do they have? to inform to persuade to inspire to teach formality size time

14 There are 2 messages in any speech: 1. The one you send 2. The one the audience receives

15 Challenge: Audiences can be Poor Listeners Reactive to trigger words or topics Listen faster than you can speak Prefer info similar to their beliefs Retain very little

16 Goal: Be Compelling Know Purpose of Speech Know Audience Show Value of Message Build Rapport

17 Types of Speeches Informative Informative/Persuasive Persuasive

18 Types of Audiences: Demographics Technical or Non-technical Educational Level Age

19 Types of Audiences: Situational & Psychological Occasion Size of Room & Group Roles & Motives Culture Feelings about you or your topic

20 Speech Overview/Preview Prepares Audience Use Connectives/Transitions Signals Topic Change Review Points Enhances Audience Retention Goal: Present a clear message

21 BeginningBeginning EndingEnding Middle As with documents, the structure of presentations should have clear beginnings, middles, and ends

22 Beginnings prepare the audience for the work to be presented Defines work Work = A + B Maps presentation A B C D Shows importance Gives background

23 Speech Organization Introduction Attention grabber thesis/central idea relation statement qualifications (if necessary) preview/forecast

24 Speech Organization -Organizational Patterns Body—or middle of the speech, presents the information in a logical order Topical Triad Chronological Problem/Cause/Solution MMS

25 Monroe’s Motivated Sequence Step 1--Attention Step 2-Need Step 3-Satisfaction Step 4-Visualization Step 5-Action

26 The ending should summarize main points and place those results in the context of the big picture point 1 point 2 point 3 point 4 point 5 point 6 point 7 point 8 point 1 point 7 Summary Big Picture

27 Speech Organization Conclusion forewarn audience of ending summarize your main points remind audience of desired response end in an upbeat manner

28 Sample Outlines

29 Structure and Speech Delivery Archives, Cal-Tech Visual Aids

30 Delivery is the speaker’s interaction with the audience Cal-Tech Stage Presence Voice AIP Movement Cal-Tech

31 Delivery How You Give the Speech Verbal Techniques Volume, Rate, Emphasis, Vocal Variety, Articulation Non-verbal Techniques Personal Appearance, Gestures, Eye Contact Language Enhances Understanding Goal: Be Captivating & Memorable

32 Speech Delivery Options Memorizing the Speech + allows eye contact - difficult for long speeches - room for precision errors - no room for improvising Reading From a Text + ensures precision - does not sound natural - no room for improvising - hinders eye contact Winging It + sounds natural - has much room for error Speaking Extemporaneously + insures organization + allows eye contact + allows improvising - some room for error

33 Delivery Essentials ~65% of total message Eye Contact and Facial Expression 50% of nonverbal message Body Movement--body language hand gestures, walking, podium use Vocalics or Paralanguage 30% of nonverbal message Distracting Mannerisms

34 Structure and Speech Delivery Archives, Cal-Tech Visual Aids


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