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Building Confidence and Overcoming Fear

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It is something that anyone can develop. Confidence is the framework of effective oral communication. What is stage fright? Stage fright, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building Confidence and Overcoming Fear


1
Building Confidence and Overcoming Fear
  • Communication Skills

2
What is confidence?
  • Confidence is the feeling you have when you
    believe that you are capable of handling a
    situation successfully.
  • You are not born with confidence!
  • It is something that anyone can develop.
  • Confidence is the framework of effective oral
    communication.

3
What is stage fright?
  • Stage fright, or communication apprehension,
    means that a person is afraid to speak in public.
  • Surveys indicate that 80 to 90 percent of
    Americans admit to feeling extremely
    uncomfortable about public speaking.
  • A phobia is an irrational fear.
  • Public speaking cannot harm you! Therefore, if
    you have an ongoing fear of it, then you have a
    phobia, which is irrational and can be overcome!

4
Common Physical Symptoms of Communication
Apprehension
  • Upset stomach
  • Flushed face
  • Dizziness
  • Fast heartbeat
  • Shortness of breath
  • Excessive perspiration
  • Wobbly legs
  • Why? The body is being flooded with energy, or
    adrenaline, because the person is perceiving an
    emergency situation.

5
Why do we get stage fright?
  • The body is flooded with energy (adrenaline)
    because we sense an emergency situation.
  • We dont like to be judged.
  • We dont think our ideas are worth listening to,
    we dont think we can express our ideas well, or
    we fear the audience wont like us while we are
    speaking.
  • We dont feel prepared.

6
So how can we overcome a fear of speaking?
  • Think your way out of uncomfortable feelings.
    Let your mind overcome your emotions!

7
Perception
  • Perception is how you see things.
  • How you perceive a situation when you feel fear
    is often very inaccurate.
  • An inaccurate perception of a situation can cause
    a person to blow things out of proportion, or
    make a problem seem greater than it is.
  • We must learn to see things as they are rather
    than how our fears might lead us to see them.

8
Perception of Your Audience
  • You may think that your audience
  • automatically knows that youre nervous.
  • Consider this
  • Studies on how well an audience perceives
    anxiety should comfort nervous speakers.
    Researchers have found that most report noticing
    little or no anxiety in a speaker. Even when
    individuals are trained to detect anxiety cues
    and are instructed to look for them, there is
    little correlation between their evaluations and
    how anxious speakers actually felt. (Ch. 2, p. 33)

9
Perception of Your Speech
  • Consider it your opportunity to share something
    meaningful (your message).
  • It is not a performance! No Hollywood screen
    tests here!
  • The speech is an extension of yourself. It
    exemplifies your personality, feelings, likes,
    and dislikes.
  • The audience will not judge or
  • score you!

10
Perception of Yourself
  • Dont compare yourself to others.
  • You dont have to be perfect!
  • Dont equate a few mistakes with
  • total failure.
  • Mistakes are an opportunity to
  • learn and improve!
  • Self-esteem, or confidence, is the result of
    discovering who you are, with all of your
    strengths and weaknesses.
  • We are all unique and have a lot to offer one
    another.

11
Building Confidence
  • Content
  • Organization
  • Notes
  • Friendliness
  • Impression
  • Dedication
  • Empathy
  • Newness
  • Conviction
  • Enthusiasm

12
Content
  • Have something worthwhile to say.
  • Do your research and develop your content.
  • Use a variety of sources (books, websites,
    magazines, newspapers, interviews, etc.).
  • Use a variety of appeals (logical, emotional, and
    ethical).

13
Organization
  • Have some type of an outline that is easy for
    both you and your audience to follow.
  • Have a main idea, clear areas of analysis, and
    supporting evidence that fits the topic.
  • You always need
  • An introduction that leads to
  • A thesis statement,
  • Support, details, and elaboration that proves
    your thesis statement,
  • And a conclusion that summarizes and provides an
    ending appeal

14
Notes
  • Jot down your ideas in a brief, directed
    (preferably outlined) form.
  • Note cards to guide your speech rather than a
    fully written-out speech!
  • Avoid having too many words on one card and
    having too many note cards.
  • Do not read to your audience!
  • Key words and phrases to remind you.
  • Notes cannot substitute for preparation!

15
Friendliness
  • Showing friendliness will encourage your audience
    to give positive feedback.
  • Smile and use your nonverbals.
  • Make eye contact.
  • Talk to individuals (Dont view the audience as a
    mass of faceless people.)

16
Impression
  • Getting off to a good start is essential in
    building confidence.
  • Smile and be positive from the moment you walk to
    the front.
  • Be well-dressed and
  • well-groomed.
  • Dont detract from your
  • message.

17
Dedication
  • Practice. Practice. Practice.
  • Try to simulate the real thing.
  • Become acquainted with your voice and how to use
    it.
  • Practice looking at people while delivering your
    speech.
  • Practice your gestures.
  • Practice movement.

18
Empathy
  • Know how it feels to feel that way.
  • Empathy is a sincere understanding of the
    feelings, thoughts, and motives of others.
  • How is your audience feeling? What is important
    to them?
  • Make an attempt to put yourself in their shoes.
  • Try to find common ground with your audience.

19
Newness
  • Apply some originality.
  • Gives confidence to have something new to say.
  • Take a different approach or slant to the topic.
  • Use a clever anecdote,
  • meaningful quote, artwork,
  • charts or graphs, or tell a
  • personal story.

20
Conviction
  • Believe in what you say.
  • Some speech topics can be boring unless you add
    your own special dimension of personal
    conviction. (Create a value statement out of a
    boring topic.)
  • If you are confident about the importance of your
    message, then your audience is more likely to be
    persuaded.

21
Enthusiasm
  • Get fired up!
  • You need energy!
  • Great outlet for nervous energy.
  • Intellectual enthusiasm comes from the sharpness
    of mind that your research brings.
  • Physical enthusiasm comes from your energetic
    nonverbal communication.
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