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How To Deliver A Speech: Speaking With Confidence and Purpose

The document provides tips for delivering an effective speech. It discusses the importance of having a confident attitude and overcoming speaker apprehension. It recommends rehearsing speeches out loud to improve delivery and emphasizes practicing vocal expression techniques like volume, pitch, rate and articulation. The document also stresses the importance of nonverbal expression like making eye contact, limited movement, and appropriate dress. Overall, it advises treating public speaking as a conversation and focusing on engaging with the audience.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
122 views19 pages

How To Deliver A Speech: Speaking With Confidence and Purpose

The document provides tips for delivering an effective speech. It discusses the importance of having a confident attitude and overcoming speaker apprehension. It recommends rehearsing speeches out loud to improve delivery and emphasizes practicing vocal expression techniques like volume, pitch, rate and articulation. The document also stresses the importance of nonverbal expression like making eye contact, limited movement, and appropriate dress. Overall, it advises treating public speaking as a conversation and focusing on engaging with the audience.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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How to Deliver a Speech

Speaking With Confidence


And Purpose
ELEMENTS OF GOOD
SPEECH

ATTITUDE
REHEARSAL
VERBAL EXPRESSION
NONVERBAL EXPRESSION
ATTITUDE
• Attitude matters a great deal with delivery.
• A confident presence is an aspect of your
credibility and persuasiveness.
• Yet people have speaker apprehension, fear
of speaking in front of an audience.
• This fear can become a self-fulfilling
prophecy: We can make ourselves fail . . .
or succeed.
DON’T

* Comment on your own performance.


* Apologize for your speaking, especially not before
you speak.
* Don’t hide behind the lectern, or chew gum.
* Don’t “watch your own feet when you dance.”
You’re just the messenger.
* Don’t stay focused on yourself or how
people are regarding you. It’s not just
about you.
* Of the three elements necessary to the
speaking process: a message, an audience
for which the message is designed, and a
messenger, the messenger is less important.
DO
* Be conversational. A public speaking situation is
still personal, if you speak naturally and make eye
contact. Look at people. They’ll relate to you.

* Move like you do in normal life, but much less.

* Stay focused on your material. You’re just the


messenger, not the point of the message. If you’ve
chosen topics well, it’s vital that you get this
information to your fellow citizens.
DO NOT
• Give up on yourself. There’s something you
do well you that may not know yet.
• Get help when you need it. Don’t go away
and try to get it “perfect” on your own before
you let anyone see it.
• Wait until the last minute. It’s a lousy habit
anyway that holds you back from your goals.
In this class, you simply can’t afford it.
REHEARSAL
• Practice, practice, practice.
• Say your speeches out loud as you’re
writing them. Some phrasing looks good
on the page, but doesn't’t fit the tongue.
Rehearsal
Places to practice:
In the car.
In the shower or bathtub.
Somewhere where you can shout without
being heard.
In your mind when your lips are tired,
And our lips will get tired is you’re speaking
correctly.
Rehearsal
Repeat some tongue-twisters for conditioning :
* Rugged rubber baby bumpers
* She sells sea shells by the seashore.
* Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled
peppers.
* How much wood could a woodchuck chuck
if a woodchuck could chuck wood? He’d chuck
all the wood that a woodchuck could, if a
woodchuck could chuck wood.
Your Battle Plan
There are several ways to deliver a speech:
1) By memory (we won’t require that)
2) By reading from a fully written manuscript
but being familiar enough to keep eye contact.
3) Speaking extemporaneously from a memorized
or written outline.
4) Speaking “impromptu” on the spur of the
moment.
Your Battle Plan
• Impromptu speaking isn’t suitable here.
• It’s possible to do some extemporaneous aspects
of the speech: introductions, transitions, source
citations, and conclusions.
• But you’re basically working with a rehearsed
manuscript because you’re building arguments that
have to be carefully read.
• Don’t try to switch battle plans mid-speech.
(Remember, there are time limits)
ELEMENTS OF GOOD
SPEAKING
VOCAL EXPRESSION:
* You must speak loudly enough to be heard, clearly enough
to be understood, and slowly enough for your audience to
keep up.

NONVERBAL EXPRESSION
* Body language matters because it influences your
credibility and helps the audience focus on your speech.
Nonverbal “frames” the verbal.
Vocal Expression
There are five dimensions of voice that can be
manipulated for greater effect.
Volume - Speak louder or softer for emphasis.
Pitch - Stay at an appropriate mid-range level.
Rate - Accelerate for a few sentences to excite,
Slow down and pause to emphasize some words.
Articulation - Speak clearly with full voice.
Quality - The personality of your voice, resonant,
throaty, nasal, etc.
Vocal Expression

* Be appropriate in tone. Sometimes when we get


nervous we laugh inappropriately during serious
moments. We may even become self-satirizing
when nervous, playing as if it weren’t important.
* While you don’t want to take yourself so seriously
that you pressure yourself into errors, you should
treat the process with respect.
Nonverbal Expression
• The nonverbal frames the verbal in this
sense: Whichever behavior interrupts the
other is the one that takes audience focus.
• If I move to draw their attention - gesture or
take a step - then speak, they’ll hear me.
• If I start to speak, then move aimlessly, the
y’ll watch but not hear.
Nonverbal Expression
• Stand still for a moment and make eye
contact with your audience. Then start.
Speak only once you’ve made contact.
• Stay in one place for awhile. Don’t pace
around through the speech. Choose 2 or 3
places where you’ll take a step or two.
• Literally, “move into” your next argument.
Nonverbal Expression
Clothing and accessories are an aspect of your
persuasion.
1) Dress appropriately to the occasion.
2) Don’t hide under hats or behind
sunglasses. (Expected not to happen!)
3) Watch jangling jewelry.
The Ineffable Interaction
• A speech isn’t something you do to
someone. It’s something you do with them.
• They’ll react how they react. They’ll laugh
at places you didn’t think were funny, then
not at places you thought were hilarious.
• Let them interact. Watch their faces and
adapt. They’re the point of the exercise.

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