Leahs Group Blog
Group Blog Presentation
Leah Albertson Group 3
Introduction:
In this class, I watched multiple groups present about important parts of public speaking from the book we have from our class. Each group focused on different chapters, ideologies, and tips on how to speak, but overall, they all connected to the same topic, which was how to become a good and efficient speaker. The presentations consisted of the groups by choosing a purpose, researching, supporting ideas, using language and delivering a speech. As I watched each group, I eventually came to the conclusion that public speaking isn't just reading a piece of paper and talking to an audience. It has multiple factors like planning, organizing, practicing, research and even confidence.
Group One:
The first group was assigned chapters one through four, and essentially the beginning parts of creating a speech in general. From what I understood, they explained how important it is to know what you are going to talk about before presenting, they explained fully that preparing is important to have a good speech. They showed us this with multiple images and facts, the group was very enthusiastic to present and talk about how important this was. They said the best way to know before you speak is to understand the topic, knowing your audience, and making sure your speech has a clear direction, I think this is extremely important considering that if you are confused on your own topic of your speech, so will your audience, and that immediately qualifies of a speech that is unprepared. What I personally enjoyed from this group was that their presentation really reminded me that public speaking starts before the actual speech. Most people think that the most difficult part about speaking is, well, speaking! But if someone prepares it well, it makes the speech much smoother for the audience to understand and follow along. I also think their topic was helpful and useful because it presented that a strong speech needs a strong foundation. Without it, the speech can feel random, sloppy and unorganized at times.
Group Two:
The second group spoke about delivering your purpose, researching your topic, supporting your ideas and delivering an effective speech. They mentioned and showed us examples of multiple brainstorming techniques to use like being creative, writing down ideas that come to you, and choosing topics you know or are willing to know about to say in your speech. I liked this because for me, choosing a topic is almost one of the hardest parts about a speech. I have sat down in multiple libraries for past classes and only thought about my topic, and then never being able to land on one efficiently. Their presentation made it seem less stressful because brainstorming gives you a nice way to start. The second group also explained the difference between a general and specific purpose. The specific purpose helps the speaker stay focused and organized. One example the second group gave was about informing an audience on how to choose a college major. I thought this was a good example because it was simple and easy to understand. They also spoke to us about the steps to properly research your topic by using books, databases, search engines and primary sources. This part also stood out to me because search makes a speech a lot more credible than most think. If a speaker only gives opinions about a topic, the likelihood for the audience not to trust or believe you is higher. Another topic that group two spoke about was plagiarism. They mainly spoke about how speakers should keep track of their sources and stick to being honest. This is very important because even in speeches, you still have to give credit to other people's ideologies and words. It is necessary that you are honest throughout your speech. Overall, I think group two had amazing ideas, examples and graphs to explain how to prepare a speech.
Group Three (My group) :
The third group was actually the group that I participated in. My section, chapter nine covered the importance of the opening and closing of a speech. I explained that the opening and closing of a speech should always be confident and preview your main points. The same goes for the closing, being confident and reviewing your main points is always key. I learned that if a speech starts and ends well, it feels more organized and complete. They are what help the audience stay focused and connected, improving your speech overall. The third group also covered important information from chapter ten, which was about using language effectively. They explained that language can be abstract, active, ambiguous or arbitrary. They also spoke about cultural language barriers like slang, jargon, idioms, and euphemisms. This is extremely important because the way you word things are extremely important and help captivate your audience in an enjoyable way. Overall, I thought the language barrier example was an extremely fun way to talk about delivering the language itself. An example I loved that they used was that an idiom might make sense to one person but confuse another. This tells me how I should use language effectively so everyone in the room can understand what I am trying to say. Our group also spoke about delivery methods in a speech, such as impromptu, memorized, manuscript, extemporaneous speaking. This was extremely useful because different speech situations require different speaking styles. They used a useful example saying that reading from a manuscript might work for a formal speech, but extemporaneous speaking may feel more natural in a classroom presentation. In general, Group three showed me the importance of engaging with your audience with your opening, closing, language, and delivery of your speech.
Excellent! This is a great reflection. I agree preparation is so important to the success of a presentation.
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