Jean-François MéliFor info: 0402 534 475 orwww.toastmasters.org
PUBLIC SPEAKING
Glossophobia
PUBLIC SPEAKING
• Glossophobia– The word comes from
the Greek glōssa, meaning tongue,
– and phobos, meaning fear or dread.
PUBLIC SPEAKINGGlobal fears top ten:
1. Fear of public speaking or stage fright - Glossophobia 2. Fear of death and end of life - Necrophobia 3. Fear of spiders and other arachnids creatures - Arachnophobia 4. Fear of darkness and twilight - Achluophobia, Scotophobia or Myctophobia 5. Fear of heights, altitude or elevations - Acrophobia 6. Fear of people or social situations - Sociophobia 7. Fear of flying - Aerophobia 8. Fear of open spaces and squares - Agoraphobia 9. Fear of natural thunder and lightning - Brontophobia 10. Fear of confined spaces or small rooms - Claustrophobia
PUBLIC SPEAKING
Why are people so afraid to get up in front of an audience and give a speech?
• Basically, people are afraid of being humiliated in front of others.
• Some may have negative experiences in the past, such as having been laughed at by the other kids in school when in front of the class.
• But, for most people, it’s the generalized fear that– they are going to get up on stage and freeze.– that people won’t like them.
PUBLIC SPEAKING
PUBLIC SPEAKING
Albert MehrabianCurrently Professor Emeritus of Psychology, UCLA), has become known best by his publications on the relative importance of verbal and nonverbal messages (.1971)
PUBLIC SPEAKING
• Verbal – 7%– Alliteration – fear of failure, people power– Catchphrases – “I have a dream”– Humour – Metaphors – “like a lamb to the slaughter, our
team ran onto the field” – Puns – “I like all the forest animals, even leeches”– Quotations – Rhyme – “do the crime and do the time”– Triplets – “I was tired. I was cold and I was hungry”
PUBLIC SPEAKING
• Para-verbal – 38%–Volume–Pace/rate–Inflection–Tone–Articulation–Pause
PUBLIC SPEAKING
• Non-verbal – 55%–Facial expression–Eye contact–Gestures–Posture–Dress and Grooming–Presentation material
PUBLIC SPEAKING• Non-Verbal Communication • Studies show that during interpersonal communication• 7% of the message is verbally
communicated While 93% is non-verbally transmitted.
• Of the 93% non-verbal communication: • 38% is through vocal tones
55% is through facial expressions• We are educated to prefer words to communicate. Therefore, we can overlook
non-verbal signals. • Foot movements, voice variations, facial expressions are all forms of non-verbal
communications that individuals send to each other. We may not verbally call someone stupid/dumb, but we may send the mess age non-verbally without realizing it.
• Body language is the oldest language. Often there is a discrepancy between someone's words and their physical actions. Confusion often occurs regarding what is heard or the message seems to be mixed. Usually in these instances, the verbal and non-verbal messages are in conflict.
• When in doubt experts say to trust the non-verbal message (what you see). • Words can be manipulated, but gestures are harder to control
PUBLIC SPEAKING
TALKS
Amy Cuddy:Your body language shapes who you areFILMED JUN 2012 • POSTED OCT 2012 • TEDGlobal 2012
PUBLIC SPEAKING
• Managing Presentation Nerves (Coping With the Fear Within)– Know Your Audience– Know Your Material– Structure Your Presentation– Practice, Practice, Practice– Prepare, Prepare, Prepare– Calm Yourself from the Inside
PUBLIC SPEAKING
PUBLIC SPEAKINGIn situations where there is
incongruence between words and expression,
That is, where the words do not match the facial expression,
People tend to believe the expression they saw, not the words spoken.
PUBLIC SPEAKING
Captivate your audience with your presentation
Don’t put them to sleep
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