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- 128 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
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About This Book
This informal, fun guide is ideal for anyone involved in public speaking; addressing a group of people in a wide range of situations including lecturing as part of your day job, presenting research findings to your academic peers, and presenting to potential future colleagues as part of an interview process. These situations are all different, and as with many things, context is everything. Whether you're working with large or small audiences, there are basic rules for speaking that should never be overshadowed by bewildering presentation technology.
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Yes, you can access The Art of Presenting by Alan Gillies in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Betriebswirtschaft & Personalmanagement. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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1 | Introduction: the three eras of presentation |
Era 1: The pre-modern era of presentation
In the good old days, we are told that public speakers could produce oratory that would hold the attention of people for hours on end without any recourse to artificial aids whatsoever. As with most nostalgic visions of a golden age in the past, it is only partially true.
There is good evidence of the power of the great orators. The good: Martin Luther King captured on film in 1963 at the Lincoln Memorial speaking to 250,000 people with his âI have a dreamâ speech; the bad: Adolf Hitler, spreading hatred through his oratory in the 1920s and 1930s; and the short: John Wesley, the Oxford don, just 5 foot 3 inches tall going out to preach to the illiterate miners of Bristol and attracting nearly 8,000 on his first Sunday alone in April 1739.
Some of the great oratory of the twentieth century has been captured on film and has been made available on the Internet. Contact me for details of where to see Martin Luther Kingâs 1963 speech for example. |
On the other hand, this view belongs to the same golden age where the local bobby cycled around preventing local youths from becoming drugs barons by a simple clip around the ear. For every great orator, we can remember the occasions when we have been bored to tears. I remember being on a course for new lecturers where we were learning about teaching, and a colleague announced: âWell the problem is, I have the most boring part of the syllabus to teach!â This was almost certainly a self-fulfilling prophecy! I was glad I wasnât one of his students.
Graphics to accompany talks were either hand written, typed or photographic slides. The overhead projector allowed speakers to illustrate their talks with words and sketches in hideous shades of mauve.
Viewed from the present, much of the activity of even 20 years ago looks hideously old-fashioned. There are almost certainly increased expectations on the part of listeners these days. Many people are seeking to communicate with them in very sophisticated ways. Todayâs children live in a world of instant, high-quality media. We are also dealing with a much less deferential society. In many cases, listeners will not sit still to be politely bored, and if they do it once, they will do it no more than once.
As an undergraduate, I was part of a group of 180 students. For the first week of a lecture course it was normal for about 100 students to turn up. Over the next few weeks the numbers either rose to about 120 as good reports spread, or started to drop. There was one lecturer who was rumoured to have been very close to receiving a Nobel prize. However, his lecturing style was such that by week 5 there were only 11 students left. Two weeks later, he was into single figures apparently. I cannot speak from first hand because I had given up by that point.
Some readers may be shocked by this and feel that more pressure should have been exerted to make attendance compulsory. Apart from the flippant observation that human rights conventions were introduced to stop such abuse, surely the more appropriate response is to seek to improve the quality of communication. Thereâs no point in enforcing attendance if no communication takes place. And students did attend if they felt it was worthwhile.
Another lecturer had written a book based on his lectures: it was sufficiently close to the content of the lectures that at the end of each session you could agree with colleagues that he had reached the bottom of page X. And yet he achieved very good attendance because his lectures added understanding to the written word on the page.
Characteristic of this era of presentation was a great variation in the quality of public speaking. The best was wonderful, the worst was truly awful.
As with many other activities, the computer has revolutionised the way that we do public speaking.
- What do you think are the advantages?
- What do you think are the disadvantages?
Era 2: The modern era of presentation
One response to this problem is to use presentation graphics software to provide a presentation to illustrate the talk, and maybe give out hand-outs of the slides as an aide memoire. Unfortunately, this superficially attractive theory does not stand up in practice.
There is a truism in IT (information technology) that if you introduce computers into a situation that is well organised, understood and structured, then a properly designed and implemented IT system will make things better. By contrast, a situation that may be characterised as disorganised will remain disorganised at best, and in many cases, the disorder will be multiplied by the introduction of IT.
Thus a disorganised and unclear talk is likely to be illustrated by slides that are cluttered and incomprehensible. A boring talk is usually accompanied by even more boring slides!
A computer with a presentation graphics package is a tool. Think about digging a hole in the road. Is a pneumatic drill a better tool than a pick and shovel? Well that depends. Itâs a more powerful tool, but it all depends on what you are going to do with it. If you are skilled in its use, it will undoubtedly speed up your task. If youâre as clumsy as I am, and whatever you use is as likely to make a hole in your foot as the road, then the more powerful tool will simply do more damage. If you think this is a foolish example, then consider the following ways in which presentation graphics packages can add to the portfolio of sure-fire ways to ruin your talk, all of which I have seen.
- The speaker who has no concept of time management can now add the crime of producing far too many slides, thus ensuring that they run over time, and that anyone with a hand-out will know in advance that they donât stand a chance of sticking to time.
- The speaker who cannot structure a talk is unlikely to suddenly acquire the skill of structuring a slide, and will often produce spectacularly cluttered slides.
- The speaker who prizes uniformity above all and speaks in the same dull monotone will likely produce screen after screen of uniform bulleted lists, which will only serve to reinforce the complete lack of variation in the whole presentation.
And I could go on, but you would quickly become bored with my bulleted list. When I sit in the audience of such talks, I am reminded of a song I learnt in childhood.
Little boxes on the hillside, little boxes made of ticky tacky. Little boxes, little boxes, little boxes all the same. Thereâs a green one and a pink one and a blue one and a yellow one, And theyâre all made out of ticky tacky, and they all look just the same. Malvina Reynolds |
The illustrations used in this book are available in colour from the author as a PowerPoint presentation. |
And I canât help thinking of a version for todayâs presenters:
Little lists made up of bullets, little lists made out of tittle tattle.
Lists of bullets, lists of bullets, lists of bullets all the same.
Thereâs a logo and a title and a bullet and another one,
And theyâre all made out of tittle tattle, and they all look just the same!
With apologies to Malvina Reynolds
Just as enforcing attendance at my undergraduate lectures would not have improved communication and could have made matters worse by making the audience restive and the lecturer nervous, so giving people powerful tools without sorting out the underlying issues is a bad idea. It is the presentation equivalent of giving me a pneumatic drill!
To improve the quality of talks, you must first sort out the fundamentals of presentation: check that you as the speaker have a grasp of how to plan a talk, structure a talk and deliver a talk. Having established the fundamentals, it is likely that you will be able to enhance your talk with the appropriate tools and avoid the equivalent of shooting (or drilling!) yourself in the foot.
If you think about other arenas, then first we learn the rules to guide us on how to act competently. However, if we wish to progress beyond competence to expertise, then a key skill we need to learn is how to use judgement on when to go beyond the rules.
Consider a model of how we move from being a novice to an expert, adapted from the work of first Dreyfus and Dreyfus (1980), refined by Benner (1984) and Storey et al. (2002) (see Table 1.1). A novice oper...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Dedication Page
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: the three eras of presentation
- 2 Ten questions to answer by planning your talk, and your answers
- 3 Ten questions to answer about giving your talk
- 4 Ten things to do with presentation graphics that arenât bulleted lists that whizz in and do a quick orbit before settling down in a font that canât be read from the front row
- 5 The take-home message
- 6 The afterword
- The Appendix: the handouts
- Index