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Mastering Public Speaking: Conversational Skills and Ethical Principles

Enhance your public speaking with tips on controlling nervousness, ethical principles, effective listening, topic selection, and audience analysis. Learn to engage and persuade your audience effectively.

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Mastering Public Speaking: Conversational Skills and Ethical Principles

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  1. Chapter One:Speaking in Public Conversation vs. Public Speaking Controlling Nervousness Speech Model

  2. Conversation vs. Public Speaking BOTH PUBLIC SPEAKING • Thoughts organized logically • Content & delivery tailored to audience • Delivered for maximum impact • Speech more highly organized • Language more formal • Different delivery

  3. Controlling Nervousness • Ask questions in classes - speaking skills • Think positively – confident “self-talk “ • Rehearse until automatic – eye contact • Visualize – see positive audience response • Don’t expect perfection – just do your best

  4. Transactional Speech Model I S R • Speaker (Enc/Dec) • Receiver (Enc/Dec) • Message • Channel • Feedback • Situation • Interference (M) Channel F S

  5. Ch.2 Ethics • Define ethics -branch of philosophy studying right & wrong • Public speakers need strong ethics -public speaking is a form of power • Guidelines for speechmaking & listening • Plagiarism

  6. Ethics of Speaking • Have ethical speech goal • Be fully prepared • Be honest • Avoid abusive language • Use ethics ALL the time (not just when convenient)

  7. Ethics of Listening • Be respectful of all in the room • Avoid prejudging speakers • Free and open expression of ideas

  8. Plagiarism • Defined: Presenting another’s ideas or words as your own. 3 Types: • Global-presenting another person’s entire speech as your own Hearing vs. Listening • Patchwork-patching together the parts of your speech by copying several sources • Incremental-failing to give credit for any quotes/paraphrases borrowed (not citing)

  9. Ch. 3 Listening Hearing vs. Listening Importance for Speechmaking 4 Types of Listening 4 Causes of Poor Listening Improving Listening

  10. Differences: Hearing – physical (sound waves) Listening – mental (attending & making sense

  11. Listening: Importance • Most of us listen poorly • Listening is needed • on the job • at school • in all aspects of life • Listening improves speaking skills

  12. 4 Types of Listening • Appreciative (to enjoy- music, comedy, etc.) • Empathic (for emotional support) • Comprehensive (to understand) • Critical (to evaluate-reasoning, evidence, facts)

  13. 4 Causes of Poor Listening • Not concentrating (gap time) • Listening too hard (for too much detail) • Jumping to conclusions (assuming w/o hearing entire message) • Focusing on delivery/appearance (judging the person not the message)

  14. 7 Ways to Improve Listening • Take it seriously • Listen actively • Resist distractions • Avoid judging looks or mannerisms • Suspend judgments until after over • Focus on ideas, evidence, & techniques to use • Take notes-main ideas & support

  15. Ch. 8 The Body of the Speech

  16. Four Introduction Goals • Attention getter • Hook - relate to audience.Why listen? • Clear Thesis Statement • Preview

  17. Ch. 10 Conclusions • Restate thesis and main points • Tie back to Introduction • Close it strongly

  18. Ch. 4 Selecting a Topic andPurpose • 4 Ways to Brainstorm • General vs. Specific Purpose Statements Specific Purpose vs. Central Idea Writing Purpose Statements & Central Ideas

  19. Choosing a Topic Consider speech directions & choose ASAP! Brainstorming - Listing what comes to mind w/o judgment, then narrowing -Inventory your skills interests, experiences -Cluster possible topics into categories -Browse through materials (reference room) -Use search engines on computer

  20. General vs. Specific Purpose • General:To inform (teach) Specific: To inform my audience of three types of solar heating General:To persuade (advocate) Specific:To persuade my audience that solar heating is better than fossil fuel heating systems :To persuade my audience to use solar heating in their homes

  21. Central Idea • Clarifies specific purpose • Concise statement sums up what you expect to say • A thesis with subject & main points (reveals more than the specific purpose) • Usually written late in preparation process Use: • Full sentence • No Questions • No figurative language • Not vague/too general

  22. Ch. 5 Audience Analysis Audience Centered Egocentric audiences Demographic traits Situational traits Audience analysis of class Audience adaptation

  23. Be Audience Centered • Primary purpose: to get desired response • Ask: To whom am I speaking? What do I want them to know? How can I write & present this for that aim? • Emphasize common values, goals, experiences

  24. Appeal to Egocentric Tendency They listen selectively to what affects them, so use psychology on them! • Tell them how it affects in several ways • Make them want to listen - vivid examples, clear language, transitions, etc. • Relate it to what they already know/believe

  25. Audience Demographics • Use ethically-avoid stereotyping! • Combine with situational analysis • Adapt to traits which can be counted: age racial, ethnic & cultural backgrounds gender sexual orientation education religious views, group memberships job intelligence residence student issues, etc. economics

  26. Ch. 6 Gathering Materials

  27. Ch. 7 Supporting Ideas

  28. Ch. 14 Informative Speaking • Importance • Types of Informative Speeches • Organization • Criteria • 5 Guidelines or Tips

  29. Importance • You will need to clearly give information the rest of your life! • Ability to convey knowledge effectively will help you in a wide range of situations: • At work • In personal and social relationships • When doing any business

  30. Types of Informative Speeches • Objects: anything visible, tangible and stable in form (The Great Pyramid of Egypt) • Processes: a series of actions leading to a result (How to Study for a Test, etc.) • Events: anything which happens or is regarded as happening (The Holocaust) • Concepts-Beliefs, theories, ideas, principles (Gravity, Buddhism, etc.)

  31. Organizing Informative Speeches • Objects: Chronological (the history of a place or person), spatial (Grand Canyon), or topical (Features of Digital Cameras) • Processes: Usually Chronological (How the Grand Canyon was Formed) and Topical (Methods Used by Stage Magicians) • Events: Chronological ( The History of the Women’s Movement), Causal (The Sinking of the Titanic), Topical (Basic Pilates Exercises)

  32. Criteria for Informative Speaking • 3 criteria for effective informative speaking: • Be accurate • Be clear • Make it meaningful & interesting to the audience

  33. Five Guidelines • Don’t over or underestimate audience knowledge • Relate it directly to your audience-work at it! • Avoid being too technical---it’s a general audience • Avoid abstractions • Use specific details • Use colorful, vivid descriptions • Use familiar comparisons to draw in your audience • Use contrast in concrete terms to give perspective • Personalize ideas! Use personal illustrations Dramatize ideas in human terms when possible Use examples (real or hypothetical) that personalize ideas

  34. Ch. 11 Using Language • Important • Denotation vs. Connotation • Accurate • Clear • Vivid • Appropriate • Inclusive

  35. Language is important • Gives meaning to events • creates our reality

  36. Not neutral: - determines many reactions • Closely linked to thinking: • Right word =right idea • Like tools: • right word for right job

  37. Denotation vs. Connotation • Denotation=precise, literal, objective • Dictionary definition • The same for all persons • Connotation=variable, figurative, subjective • Suggestion, implication • Can be different for each person

  38. Use Language Accurately • Shades of meaning matter: Don’t use if not sure of meaning; look it up! Develop a plan to improve vocabulary Will pay off “big time” in the future

  39. Use Language Clearly Meaning must be instantly clear to listeners: • Use familiar words- esp. if technical topic • Use concrete words • Eliminate clutter (lean and lively)

  40. Use Vivid Language • Use imagery(create a mental picture w/ words) • Concrete, sensory words(pull listeners in) • Simile(compare unlike things using like or as) “Her voice was as soft as a gentle breeze.” • Metaphor(compare unlike things w/olike or as) “Her voice was a gentle breeze.” • Use rhythm:arranging words for interesting sounds • Parallelism - similar arrangement of words/phrases/ sentences • Repetition - same words/phrases at begin. or end of next sentence • Alliteration - same begin.consonant sound in close or next word • Antithesis – contrasting ideas (usually parallel structure)

  41. Use Language Appropriately • For occasion – adjust to formality and etiquette • For audience - avoid possible offensive or confusing language • Profanity/off-color language ( not suitable in a formal setting) • Technical jargon (not suitable for a general audience) • Name calling or any abusive language • For topic – Choose language by type of speech – informative speech : straightforward, descriptive language - Commemoration : special devices (metaphor, alliteration, antithesis) - Persuasion : factual but also emotional appeals • For speaker –Be yourself at your best, not your worst • Not too casual and never offensive

  42. Use Inclusive Language • Respect ALL groups • Do not stereotype, demean or patronize • Be ethical, accurate, and audience-centered • For inclusive language AVOID • Identifying jobs and social roles by gender • The generic “he” or “man” (use plurals instead) • Using names that groups use only for themselves • Identifying personal traits unrelated to the topic

  43. Ch. 12 Delivery • Importance of good delivery • Characteristics of good delivery • Four methods of delivery • Eight aspects of voice • Four aspects of movement • Practicing delivery • Question/Answer sessions

  44. Importance of Good Delivery • Good delivery: makes or breaks a speech! • Using nonverbal communication (voice and body) conveys your message • Good delivery is an art! • It is clear, interesting, and not distracting • It has formality & good conversational qualities: energy eye contact vocal and physical expression directness

  45. Methods of Delivery • Manuscript or verbatim (word for word) -for strict time limits (the news) and accuracy (State of the Union) • Memorized - only when very short; known so well focus can be communicating rather than remembering • Impromptu - little or no preparation - use a formula (state topic, the point you want to make, enough support toprove it, summarize) • Extemporaneous (in class!) - Prepared and practiced in advance -from notes but wording can change -advantages: more conversational, natural, better eye contact.

  46. Vocal Control • Adjust volume for room and audience • Adjust pitch to create interest/avoid dullness • Adjust rate for voice, mood of speech, audience and occasion • Use pauses for impact-to signal end of thought, let idea sink in, for dramatic effect . AVOID vocal pauses (um, like, you know, well, etc.)! • Use vocal variety-in the above ways to be dynamic not dull • Pronunciation –errors reduce credibility. Check dictionary or with others so rehearsing is correct. • Articulate carefully – each speech sound distinctly. Don’t be lazy! Diagnose errors then practice. (The college has free services here.) • Dialects (Accents, grammar patterns, vocabulary for region or ethnic group) - neither right nor wrong, but heavy use can cause problems if audience does not share it.

  47. Physical Delivery • Four Aspects of Bodily Action • Appearance matters! • Movement- matters before during & after speech, avoid distracting moves • Gestures- plan for impact, don’t distract, be natural, adapt to audience and occasion • Eye Contact Creates a bond w/ audience Gets attention & credibility Helps audience perceive you as sincere, honest, comfortable Aids your response to audience feedback during speech

  48. Improving Delivery • Say aloud the preparation outline - see if it sounds good, clarify and revise • Prepare speaking outline - (only key words/phrases in same format) • Practice aloud with your speaker outline now, just learn ideas and structure, not exact words • Polish using mirror (nonverbal), tape (verbal) and other persons (last) • Dress rehearse in as similar a situation as possible - empty class, w/visual aids, an audience if possible Start early to reduce tension and be in control!

  49. Answering Audience ?s If Needed • ?s can impact the audience as much as the speech • Think of poss. ?s and answers, practicing aloud • Managing a ?/A session • Find out if there will be ?/A period. • Stay positive, calm and open. ?s show interest in your topic, are a chance to clarify and further impress audience. • Listen carefully to each ?, and ask for clarification if needed so you can answer. • Direct answers to entire audience (not just the one who asked), and restate each ? Before answering. • Be honest and straightforward. Say if you don’t know,offer to find out, but DON”T bluff! • Don’t waste time. Stay on track, avoid debating, and wrap up by thanking audience for their attention IF there is a ?/a period.

  50. Ch. 13 Visual Aids • Advantages of using • Types • Guidelines for creating • Use

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