1 / 17

Online PowerPoints to accompany Cornerstone:

Online PowerPoints to accompany Cornerstone: Discovering Your Potential, Learning Actively, and Living Well Fifth Edition Robert M. Sherfield Rhonda J. Montgomery Patricia G. Moody. CORNERSTONE: Discovering Your Potential, Learning Actively, and Living Well. CHAPTER TWELVE COMMUNICATE:

Télécharger la présentation

Online PowerPoints to accompany Cornerstone:

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. Online PowerPoints to accompany Cornerstone: Discovering Your Potential, Learning Actively, and Living Well Fifth Edition Robert M. Sherfield Rhonda J. Montgomery Patricia G. Moody

  2. CORNERSTONE:Discovering Your Potential,Learning Actively, and Living Well CHAPTER TWELVE COMMUNICATE: Fostering Your Research, Writing, and Speaking Talents

  3. CHAPTER 12 OBJECTIVES This chapter can help you: • Develop research skills • Select topics for presentations • Appreciate the power of words • Gain employability skills • Analyze various types of audiences • Organize and deliver quality speeches

  4. TEN STEPS TO COMMUNICATION SUCCESS • Topic selection • Audience analysis • Purpose statement • Research process • Organization • Writing process • Documentation • Outlining • Using audio-visual aids • Rehearsal and delivery

  5. TOPIC SELECTION • What type of paper or speech are you writing? • What are your talents and interests? • Is there sufficient material? • Is your topic appropriate? • Can it be discussed in the time allowed? • Can the topic be narrowed?

  6. AUDIENCE ANALYSIS • Race and gender • Sexual orientation • Values and beliefs • Religion • Attitudes • Politics • Marital or parental status • Socio-economic status • Occupation or interests • Level of education or understanding

  7. SOURCES FOR RESEARCH • Personal interviews with experts • Electronic and print indexes • Books • Electronic library catalog and databases • The Internet • Periodicals • Newspapers • Reference materials • Government documents

  8. ORGANIZATION • Spatial • Cause/effect • Chronological • Problem-solving • Topical/categorical • Compare/contrast • Importance/priority

  9. ETHICS FOR WRITING AND SPEAKING • Share only what you know to be true • Be fully prepared and informed • Consider your audience’s best interest • Make your message clear • Don’t use words as weapons • Don’t “spin” information • Respect cultural diversity • Know you are accountable for your words

  10. LANGUAGE USAGE • Use colorful, vivid language • Use unbiased language • Use simple language • Use concrete language • Use parallelism

  11. CREATING AN EFFECTIVE INTRODUCTION • Tell a story or create a mental picture • Use startling facts or statistics • Refer to a well-known event • Ask pertinent rhetorical questions • Use novel ideas or striking statements • Use quotations • Use humor • Show a visual

  12. CONCLUDING A PAPER OR SPEECH • Summarize main points • Make a final appeal to audience • Refer back to introduction • Complete the opening story • Re-emphasize the impact of your topic • Use a vivid analogy or simile • End powerfully

  13. BE SURE TO DOCUMENT… • Direct quotations • Others’ opinions, judgments, insights • Information not widely known • Information open to dispute • Information not commonly accepted • Tables, charts, graphs, statistics

  14. AUDIO / VISUAL AIDS • Physical objects • Models, drawings, maps • Photographs, slides • Graphs, charts, tables • Slick or chalkboards • Audio or video recordings • Posters, flip charts • Computer graphics or presentations • Real people, yourself

  15. WHY WE FEAR PUBLIC SPEAKING • Fear of failure • Fear of the unknown • Fear of evaluation • Fear of attention • Fear of difference • Fear of cultural differences

  16. CHAPTER REFLECTION • Use a comprehensive thesis statement • Use credible, documented research • Use Internet sources with caution • Rehearse speeches aloud often • Take opportunities to speak in public • Use logical organization • Use a variety of research sources • Develop an “I can” attitude • Choose topics you know • Use a keyword outline • Analyze and relate to the audience • Use vivid, colorful language • Use technology to complement your presentation

  17. JUST FOR FUN !! Character Illustration by Christian O’Brien

More Related