Title: Mechanics of Delivering a Seminar
1Mechanics of Delivering a Seminar
2Numerical Ranking of Fears From the Book of Lists
- 7. Death
- 6. Flying
- 5. Sickness
- 4. Deep water
- 3. Financial problems
- 2. Heights
- 1. Speaking before a group of people
3Public Speaking
- In public speaking, the flow of information is
essentially in one direction - from the speaker
to the listener - The speaker bears nearly all the responsibility
for the successful transfer of information
4Dealing with Fear/Nervousness
- Natural to be nervous - indicates that you take
the responsibility seriously - Controlled by confidence based on your
preparation and practice - Memorize and practice opening
- From then on, focus on the delivery and
nervousness will enhance your presentation
5Responsibilities of a Speaker
- Speak so you can be heard and understood
throughout the room - Help audience process new information
- Help audience stay focused
6Project your voice so you can be heard
- When inhaling, relax stomach muscles (increases
lung capacity) - When exhaling, tighten stomach muscles (supplies
extra air) - Hold your head up so throat is unrestricted
- Hold mouth open somewhat wider than usual
7Use good diction so you can be understood
- Pronounce all consonants distinctly
- Pronounce all syllables of all words
- Naturally slows pace of speaking
- Increases voice projection since you can be
clearly understood at greater distances
8Control pace to help listener with processing
- The average listener can process unfamiliar
information at a maximum rate of only 120
words/min. - Your conversational speaking rate is 150-170
words/min. - Slow down to roughly 2/3 of your conversational
rate
9Use real pauses to help listener with processing
- Pause silence
- Allows listeners chance to catch up
- Gives you time to think
- Filling pauses with ah, like, um, you
know what I mean, etc., interferes with the
opportunity of audience to catch up
10Use transitions to help listener with processing
- A listener cannot page back and reread material -
speaker must provide reinforcement of short term
understanding - At the end of each topic, provide a brief summary
of that topic - At the beginning of each new topic, provide a
transition to that topic
11Use voice modulation to help listener stay focused
- Avoid speaking in a monotone
- Change pitch, intensity, and/or tone of your
voice to help keep the audience focused
12Use enthusiasm to help listener stay focused
- Naturally produces voice modulation
- Adds a visual component of body language
- Helps you control nerves
13Compensate for Necessary Distractions
- Using low lighting when projecting slides invites
the audience to go to sleep - To help audience keep focused
- Animate text
- Keep pace appropriate to text difficulty
- Modulate voice
- Be enthusiastic - animate yourself
14Compensate for Necessary Distractions
- Handouts or show-and-tell materials provide a
competing focus - Consider benefit/risk before using
- Facing away from the audience when using a
pointer interferes with ability of audience to
hear you - Must increase voice projection
- Use alternative focusing method
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16Use feedback to handle distractions you control
- Visual contact with audience provides feedback to
make you aware of distractions - Make adjustments to deal with distractions when
possible - speak louder or slower, provide more
transitions, focus a projector, etc.
17Distractions You Can Control Visual Distractions
- Leaving completed material visible too long,
making future material visible too early, etc. - Body language avoid mannerisms such as pacing,
rocking back and forth, poor posture, rattling
keys, fidgeting with necktie, etc.
18Distractions that you may not be able to control
- Uncomfortable room conditions, loud noises from
vending area or construction, fire-drill, water
leaks, burglar alarm, etc. - Students arriving late, students leaving early,
intruders, etc.
19Parade Magazine, 5/18/75
20Chemical and Engineering News, 4/21/75, p.68
Chronicle 4/1/75
21Ending a Talk
- Summarize main points and review conclusions -
part of helping listener process new information - Thank the audience
- Offer to answer any questions - part of helping
listener process new information
22Question and Answer Session
- Listen carefully to the question
- Restate the intent of question
- Keep answers brief
- Offer to find answers, if uncertain
- Offer to discuss points later with a person who
is monopolizing the session