1 / 14

Public Speaking

Public Speaking. Chapter 1: What’s It All About?. Objectives. Upon completing this session, you will be able to: Associate the ability to think, speak, and write well with your success in life Identify the 9 features that make public speaking different than conversing

Donna
Télécharger la présentation

Public Speaking

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Public Speaking Chapter 1: What’s It All About?

  2. Objectives • Upon completing this session, you will be able to: • Associate the ability to think, speak, and write well with your success in life • Identify the 9 features that make public speaking different than conversing • Define the roles of speaker and audience • State the historical origins of public speaking • Explain the transactional aspects of public speaking • Discuss the meaning of Logos, Ethos, and Pathos

  3. Public Speaking: A Calling Card • Ability to effectively think, speak and write will add to your success in: • Relationships • In other courses • In work • Today corporate recruiters look for people who can “…speak clearly, confidently, and concisely.” • Of 11 fundamental skills recruiters look for, the “ability to communicate orally” tops the list. • IBM-Nortel-Advertising-Journalism-Public!

  4. Public Speaking In General • Conversation with a point or purpose • Intentional speaking with spontaneity • Planned out ahead • Is addressed to many versus one or a few • The audience is considered and contributes • Is colorful and compelling • Visualizations • Metaphors • Be careful -- Denotative vs. connotative

  5. Public speaking: Not Chit Chat • Public speaking vs. Conversation • Is more audience centered • Is organized and planned (3 parts) • Is grounded in responsible knowledge • Has a clear purpose (goal) • Uses more formal/precise language • Has more defined speaker and listener roles • Has a more formal environment and larger groups

  6. Speaker Purpose Message Medium Setting Listener Response Interference Consequences Public Speaking: Nine Elements Public speaking is distinctive as a form of communication through the interrelationship of 9 elements:

  7. Speaker Purpose Message Medium Setting Listener Response Interference Consequences Public Speaking: Nine Elements The roles of speaker and listener: Speaker Listener

  8. Public Speaking: The Setting • Setting can be: • Physical • Venue • Environment • Conducive or not? • Psychological • Occasion • Expectations of audience • Participative or Suspicious • Cooperative or Uncooperative?

  9. Public Speaking: The Response • What do you want them to think, feel, or do during and after? • How do you respond/adapt to them? • Consider the “what ifs” in preparing speech • Consider the thermostat: You need one. • Public Speaking is transactional

  10. Public Speaking: Origins • Started in ancient Greece • Taught Math, Music, Gymnastics & Rhetoric. • Rhetoric: The art or study of using language effectively and persuasively. • Forensic:Establishment of facts through science or argument. Appropriate for courts of law • No professional lawyers or judges • Speaker had to communicate to and convince jury of over 200 citizens. • Aristotle systematized as three major parts: Logos, Ethos, and Pathos Lets discuss these 3 words

  11. Public Speaking: Free Speech and Ethics • Freedom of speech • What does it mean? • Why is it important? • Ethics • Apply responsible knowledge • Know your subject better than your audience does • Understand what experts say/believe about subject • Be aware of most recent events • Realize how points may affect listeners-know your audience

  12. Public Speaking: Ethics Don'ts • Don’ts • Don’t quote out of context • What is said is given meaning, by who said it when, where they said it and under what conditions in response to what events. • Don’t plagiarize • Two degrees • Presenting others’ work, ideas, research as yours • Neglecting citation fundamentals • Types: Mix and match – cut and paste

  13. Public Speaking: Ethics Values • Native American Perspective • Ethics basics are universal • Interviews with leading moral representatives from many cultures revealed the existence of a global code of ethical conduct: • Love, truthfulness, fairness, freedom, unity, tolerance, responsibility and respect for life *From Shared Values for a Troubled world, Rushworth M. Kidder - President of the Institute for Global Ethics

  14. Summary • Having completed this session, you can: • Associate the ability to think, speak, and write well with your success in life • Identify the 9 features that make public speaking different than conversing • Define the roles of speaker and audience • State the historical origins of public speaking • Explain the transactional aspects of public speaking • Discuss the meaning of Logos, Ethos, and Pathos

More Related