首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Techniques for Oral Presentation In your university work, you will be expected to give oral presentations, in the form of rep
Techniques for Oral Presentation In your university work, you will be expected to give oral presentations, in the form of rep
admin
2011-01-02
24
问题
Techniques for Oral Presentation
In your university work, you will be expected to give oral presentations, in the form of reports or simply in the form of【1】. There are several things you can do to make your oral presentations clear and easy to understand.
The essential point to realize is that speech and writing are different. The first principle to keep in mind when you’re planning to speak in public is that you have to help the【2】.
In an oral report, the rate of delivery has to be slower. One of the best ways to help your audience is simply to【3】Beyond the simple【4】, there are ways of organizing your presentation that can help the listener recognize and understand your main points. The organization of your talk should allow enough【5】for the listener to think both before and after each new idea.
The purpose of the time before the new information is to give the audience a chance to understand the【6】clearly. The purpose of the time after the new information allows listeners to fit the idea into their【7】knowledge of the subject. Thinking time gives the listener a chance to make sure the idea was understood before going on to the next new idea.
There are three common ways to give the listener time for thinking after a point of new information. One way is simply to【8】A second method is to use【9】. A third way to give the listener time to think is to use【10】.
In summary, then, we know that oral language should deliver information at a slower rate than you can use in written language. New information should be presented more gradually. Thinking time should be provided both before and after each important new item. There are three most common ways to allow this thinking time.
I hope that these suggestions will help make your oral presentation a great success.
【8】
Techniques for Oral Presentation
In your university work, you will be expected to give oral presentations, in the form of reports or simply in the form of answers to questions. There are several things you can do to make your oral presentations clear and easy to understand.
The essential point to realize is that speech and writing are different. If you want to be clearly understood, you can’t simply read your written report aloud. The biggest difference between spoken and written language is that readers can look back over the printed words when they don’t understand. In spoken language, however, listeners can’t go back and check the words. They can rely only on memory. So the first principle to keep in mind when you’ re planning to speak in public is that you have to help the listener’s memory. This means that an oral report can’t deliver information as rapidly as a written report. That is, you can’t have as many pieces of new information packed into the same number of words, because they will come at too fast a rate for the listener to understand.
In an oral report, the rate of delivery has to be slower. One of the best ways to he]p your audience is simply to speak slowly. Many people speak too fast when they speak to a group. This is a mistake, especially if you have a foreign accent, because it makes listening more difficult. Beyond the simple technique of speaking more slowly when you speak before a group, there are ways of organizing your presentation that can help the listener recognize and understand your main points.
The organization of your talk should allow enough time for the listener to think both before and after each new idea. The purpose of the time before the new information is to give the audience a chance to understand the background clearly. Knowledge of the background, or setting of the information, makes it much easier to anticipate what kind of information is coming next. If the new information occurs too early, without enough background, the listener isn’t prepared to understand the new idea. So before each piece of information, the listeners should be prepared with enough background to be able to predict what’s coming.
I’ve been describing the time for thinking before the new information. It’s also important to provide time for thinking after the new information. This thinking time allows listeners to fit the idea into their general knowledge of the subject. Thinking time gives the listener a chance to make sure the idea was understood before going on to the next new idea.
There are three common ways to give the listener time for thinking after a point of new information. One way is simply to pause. A moment of silence gives the listener time to take in the new information, but there are other ways. A second method is to use a paraphrase. That is, you say the same thing, but in different words. This paraphrase, or repetition of the idea, helps the listeners to fix the thought in their memory. A third way to give the listener time to think is to use words that don’t mean much. These are words that convey no information but just fill time. For instance, you might say something like "as I’ve been saying" or "and so forth and so on." That kind of expression doesn’t really say anything. It’s just made of what we call "filler words." The words have no real meaning, but they do perform a useful function, since they allow the listener time to think.
In summary, then, we know that oral language should deliver information at a slower rate than you can use in written language. New information should be presented more gradually. Thinking time should be provided both before and after each important new item. The time before is to provide a background so that the listeners can have a chance to anticipate the idea. The time after is to allow the listeners a chance to understand what they just heard. The three most common ways to allow this thinking time are: to pause, to paraphrase, and to use filler words.
I hope that these suggestions will help make your oral presentations a great success.
选项
答案
pause
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/MoeO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
CivilizationandHistoryMostofthepeoplewhoappearmostoftenandmostgloriouslyinthehistorybooksaregreatconquero
BurialCustomsinAncientEgyptEveryoneburnsfatdifferently.Thesearchfortheperfectdiethasneverbeenmorefrenzied.
Afterhavingassuredtheirreturnjourney,thewriterandhiscompanioncouldconcentrateoncollectingandfilmanimals.Decidi
WaltWhitmanwasapioneeringfigureofAmericanpoetry.Hisinnovation,firstofall,liesinhisuseof______,poetrywithout
InApril1995,ayoungChinesechemistrystudentatBeijingUniversitylaydyinginaBeijinghospital.Shewasinacoma,anda
BenBuchananandAMagicBookTheTexasteenisdevouringthe672pagesofHarryPotterandtheHalf-BloodPrincewrittenby
B美国文学之作家作品。UncleTom’sCabin(《汤姆叔叔的小屋》)是一部以反抗奴隶制为主题的小说,是女作家HarrietBeecherStowe的成名作。林肯曾经高度评价过这部小说。
D英国历史。题目询问是谁建立的诺曼王朝,答案是被称为征服者威廉的诺曼底公爵威廉(DukeWilliamofNormandy)。JuliusCaesar率领罗马人侵略英格兰;HenryⅧ的功绩是进行了英国宗教改革;OliverCromwell则
C英国文学之作家概况。JohnKeats(1795—1821),第二代浪漫主义诗人代表,代表作为OdetoaNightingale(《夜莺颂》),写作风格推崇“Beautyistruth,truthbeauty’’。
C语言学基本概念。本题考查系统功能语法中的两个重要概念Theme(主位)和Rheme(述位)。
随机试题
在学生表中要查找所有年龄大于30岁姓王的男同学,应该采用的关系运算是()。
适用简易程序时,人民检察院
A.中毒性结肠扩张B.肠梗阻C.两者均是D.两者均非溃疡性结肠炎较常见的并发症是
治疗疟疾时,选加截疟药物,服药时间一般宜在疟发前
A.中脘B.三阴交C.阳陵泉D.太渊E.膻中筋会
公民、法人或者其他组织认为具体行政行为侵犯其合法权益时,可向行政机关提出公民、法人或者其他组织对行政机关的具体行政行为不服申请行政复议的,作出具体行政行为的行政机关属于
以下不属于合同文件的是()
危机现场处理的内容不包括()。
随着信息传播速度的加快,微信的“朋友圈”经常被所谓的“科学”流言包围,甚至有时会引发群众的恐慌。下列“科学”流言中,确实有误的是:①闻醋能有效预防感冒②完全素食并不健康③晚上11:00~凌晨1:00人体的肝脏会进行排毒④吞咽口香糖会黏住肠胃⑤吃覆
走近深圳这座现代化的大都市里,我们的感受是什么?与朋友打电话时,经常从他们口中听到这样的话:好累啊,压力好大啊,永远都有干不完的工作啊……现在最流行的一个词是:在路上;最流行的一句感慨是:活得好累!都市人,一如海德格尔形容的“沉沦于操劳和操持之中”,连偶尔
最新回复
(
0
)