Chapters 1-3 PowerPoint
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Transcript Chapters 1-3 PowerPoint
SPC 1315 / 1321
Dr. Tony DeMars
Planned Schedule
Today: Chaps 1-3, start 4-8
Wednesday: Chaps. 4-8, impromptu
Outline
& note card emailed by Wed. 10pm
Hard copy start of class Thursday, stapled
Thursday: Intro Speech
Motivational topic
Informative & Persuasive Speech topics
Interview Project
Planned Schedule
Interview Project
Select
a job ad
Create or fine tune a résumé
Email rough draft by Fri
([email protected])
Schedule an information gathering visit
and otherwise gather research
In
email -- short report about the visit
Schedule an interview
Remember…
Learning to speak?
Realizing you were saying something
wrong?
Feeling unsure of your communication
in a group or one-on-one?
Thinking about how well you conveyed
a message?
Not remembering someone’s name?
Getting started
Four parts of a proper speech:
Research
& development -- your own work
Submission of rough draft then final
materials
Creation of presentation aids
Practice sessions and evaluation
Presentation of speech
‘Giving a Speech’
Research – not just Internet, citing sources,
learning and sharing information
Outlines and notes --- first drafts, final drafts,
note card
Speech organization
Delivery
gestures, movement, eye contact, speech
patterns, appearance
Evaluating the audience
PowerPoint? This use, vs. a speech
Questions?
Prep steps
Rough draft / final draft materials
Research and full sentence outlines
APA
style for citing sources
Final draft outline required for speech
Getting Started
Fear of Public Speaking
Rather have a root canal
Feared more than death
But, really?
Benefit of good communication skills
Ability
Better
Better
to be more involved in groups
chances in getting a job
ability to organize and present ideas
How to improve?
Understanding
and practice
Some things related to Chap. 1
Course outline has sample questions
related to a broader area of each
chapter than we cover in class
http://www.tonydemars.com
http://faculty.tamuc.edu/ tdemars
In each case, click on SPC Class, then
also see links on course outline
Communication Process
Similar to p. 11
Sender / encoding (meaning) / channel /
noise / decoding / feedback
Public Speaking
‘Giving a Speech’
Occasions: Business presentation,
graduation speaker, after-dinner, eulogy
(‘impromptu’ for tomorrow)
‘Capital S’ Speech: podium, stage, large
audience
Note: podium vs. lectern
Note: accent vs. dialect
Public Speaking: ‘an event when a group of
people agree that one person, the speaker,
will direct the event.’
Scholarly interpretation
Scholars of preliterate societies remind us that
speech is the most fundamental tool of social
organization.
Walter Ong special feature of oral cultures: when
the spoken word was the only form of preserving
culture, speech had to be memorable.
Marshall MacLuhan and other media scholars
coined the term ‘secondary orality’ to describe the
rekindling of a preference for intense, visceral,
immediate kinds of communication.
Aristotle
Three genres of speaking
Three categories of persuasive appeals
Forensic (like a courtroom)
Deliberative (legislature)
Epideictic / ceremonial (praise / blame)
Logos -- most fundamental: logic and intellectual
substance
Pathos -- motivational appeals
Ethos -- credibility of the speaker
Aristotle said a speaker’s character is the most
important means of persuasion he possesses.
Public Speaking is Meaning Centered
Many other factors and intellectual
evaluations, but ultimately...
Meaning Centered
Meaning
Meaning
Meaning
is social
is contextual
is negotiated in discouse
(hegemony)
Johari Window / similar to book’s four
‘stages of learning skills’
Three Communication Resources
Draw on your conversation skills
Relaxed,
spontaneous, responsive to the
situation, expression of feelings,
compassion to others
Draw on your writing skills
Brainstorming,
tinkering with ideas,
attention to word choices and organization
Draw on your performance skills
Timing,
emotional build-up, eye contact
Common Misconceptions
Good speakers are born, not made
Good speaking should be easy right
away
Speaking will always be as difficult as it
is when you’re first learning it
There are simple formulas for public
speaking
Public speaking is mostly about
performance
Public Speaking
Five Steps:
Plan, Investigate, Compose, Practice, Present
Most time? Investigate / compose / practice
Speech nervousness? Incomplete preparation
Types of delivery: Impromptu, Memorized,
Extemporaneous
We are doing extemporaneous (that uses a full
sentence outline and note card)
Types of content: lectures, informative speeches,
persuasive speeches, ceremonial speeches,
motivational speeches...
Our main speeches: Informative and Persuasive
Chap. 2 -- Listening
Communication Model
Sender / channel / noise / receiver /
feedback
We spend much more time listening
than speaking
Doing it a lot does not equate to doing it
well
Training ourselves to be good listeners
Preparing to Listen
Remove distractions (physical / mental)
Stop Talking
Decide on your purpose as a listener
Be both curious and critical
Show
respect for the speaker
Be open to the speaker’s point of view
Improving Listening
Follow the structure of the speech
Speaker
should have a good structure
Assess speaker’s claims, ask questions at
designated time
Provide constructive feedback
Start
with the positive
Make important comments first
Be descriptive
Offer suggestions, not orders
Improving Listening
Listen to optimize learning
Paraphrase
Ask
follow-up questions
TAKE NOTES!
Listen holistically
Listen
at multiple levels
Listen between the lines
Listen to silences
Listening pitfalls
Daydreaming, doodling (surfing)
Superficial qualities of speaker as distraction
Uncritically accepting a message
Prematurely or totally rejecting a message
Planning your response or rebuttal instead of
listening
Dominating the feedback time, or withdrawn
from the process
Speech critiques
Guide you toward following these
listening issues
Part of your grade
Require relevant comments
NOTICE -- the links for your speech
evaluation page and the speech critique
pages are NOT the same
Questions / Discussion
Why is listening important to public
speaking?
What advice would you give a friend
required to give feedback to coworkers?
What listening pitfalls do you find most
challenging?
Does ‘multitasking’ interfere with the
communication process?
Chap. 3 -- Ethics
Two categories of ethical theories:
Deontological: duty based
Teleological: consequence-based
Deontological: Judeo-Christian (the
right)
Teleological: Utilitarian (the good)
Every action has an ethical dimension.
Ethical decisions are rarely clear-cut.
Ethical decisions vary with context.
Ethics in speaking
Never plagiarize
Never fabricate / lie
Don’t oversimplify
Don’t use propaganda
Videotaped / checked with turnitin.com
Sources checked
Name-calling, glittering generalities, testimonials,
‘just plain folks,’ card stacking, bandwagon,
trasference
Be sensitive to your audience
Content and ideas
Legal issues vs. ethics
Libelous comments
Privacy laws
Encitement
Hate Speech
First Amendment protections
Law allows much more than ethics, in
the U.S.
Speech samples as time permits
Motivational or persuasive?
Informative --or persuasive? Cloning
Ethics? Propaganda?
Evidence? Transitions? Delivery? “God intended”?
Dinosaurs and Terrorists? Citations?
Persuasive ? -- or motivational? Correction of
errors? Clear overview? Enough evidence?
(answers.com as a source?) His verbal ‘filling in of
silence? His attention getting technique? His ‘are
you ready’? Pounding the lectern a problem?
Bad Informative Speech
Reminders
Course Outline and Syllabus on web site
Grades on Engrade -- estimates of average
E-mail: only Tony.DeMars@tamu-c
Speech content ONLY to [email protected]
(except ... Visual PP)
Tests not returned -- come see
Speech preparations and practice
Reading vs. class notes:
Next -- overcoming fear, speech planning
Questions?