http://professor-lyman.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] professor-lyman.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2013-01-15 09:13 am
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Public Speaking [Tuesday, January 15, 2013]

"Good morning," Josh said, sipping from his nice, hot cup of coffee (thank you, Donna Natalie!) as he leaned against his desk at the front of the classroom. "Today we'll get started learning about the basic categories of speeches. I don't mean short or long, or interesting and stupefying, those though certainly are ways to remember speeches. There are four general groupings, with some overlap between categories: informative, persuasive, demonstrative, and special occasion. You can't be very persuasive if you you're not also demonstrating your grasp of information."

He began walking between the aisles as he talked. "An informative speech is basically a lecture. Every class you attend here, I hope, is intended to teach you something."

Or provide entertainment for the teacher, but Josh hadn't seen Jaye again yet.

"An informative speech is different from a how-to speech or a persuasive speech because it is only intended to provide information. You leave it up to your audience to decide for themselves what to do with the information; you're not trying to persuade them to think like you do, nor are you specifically teaching them how to do something. You're only concerned with providing information for your audience on a particular topic.

"Informative speeches are useful as an introduction to some topic that is unfamiliar to your audience, which is why audience research pays off. You wouldn't want to lecture on how a bill becomes a law to members of Congress."

Josh paused. "Well, to their staffs, at least. Some of the members of Congress are amazingly stupid and might not know. Anyway, one of the most important things to include in an informative speech is, of course, information. You will want to do research on facts and statistics, to make that your speech has something interesting to give the audience. Those facts and statistics will probably be best communicated with visual aids, such as charts, graphs, illustrations, and so forth, because providing information both aurally and visually means you have a better chance of people remembering it, but for the love of God, don't subject us all to death by Powerpoint, the Pentagon's favorite legal torture method."

Josh continued to lecture about informative speeches, showing the students how to get their audience involved through asking questions, and providing examples, and warning them about avoiding the pitfalls of seeming like a giant know-it-all by providing too much information.

"President Bartlet enjoyed trivia," he said, "and during debate prep for re-election he would get down into the weeds of specific legislative initiatives that the average voter, frankly, had never heard of. Your goal is to provide information without making your audience feel stupid for not knowing it to begin with or to be so specific their eyes glaze over. So next week, come in with one visual aid and a speech prepared about the last twenty years of history in your home dimension. Your speech should be at least ten minutes long."

"Today, though, we're going to do some audience research through extemporaneous speeches. No need to thank me," he added, walking around with a jar full of pieces of paper. "You each get a topic, then a full minute to think of what you're going to say. You only have to talk for three minutes." He held up a stop watch. "I'll be timing you."

He smiled. "And after that, our press secretary for the day is--" he ran his finger down the attendance sheet, "--Peter Wiggin. Congratulations. And Mr. Luthor, you impressed me so much that you can be my second assistant along with the lovely...." she wouldn't bring him coffee unless he remembered her name, "...Natalie."
hasadestiny: ([neu] totes interested in what you say)

Re: Sign in [1/15]

[personal profile] hasadestiny 2013-01-15 07:48 am (UTC)(link)
Lex Luthor
hasadestiny: ([pos] attentive and adorable)

Re: Talk to Josh or the TAs!

[personal profile] hasadestiny 2013-01-15 07:49 am (UTC)(link)
Lex was maybe preening just a little at impressing Josh. But subtly though.

Re: Sign in [1/15]

[identity profile] holy-daughter.livejournal.com 2013-01-15 07:49 am (UTC)(link)
Lucrezia Borgia
lockestheway: (peter: aloof)

Re: Sign in [1/15]

[personal profile] lockestheway 2013-01-15 08:07 am (UTC)(link)
Peter Wiggin

Re: Speak Extemporaneously!

[identity profile] holy-daughter.livejournal.com 2013-01-15 08:08 am (UTC)(link)
Lucrezia was not going to disconcert herself. She had sat in the Papal throne and lectured the College of Cardinals; granted, she had prepared thoroughly for that. Nevertheless, she was not going to allow the situation to intimidate her.

She used the full minute to write a few quick notes on a scrap of paper, in case she should need reminders.

"A fool and his money are soon parted," she began, speaking in a clear voice. "This statement is the subject of my speech. It reflects that the opinion that foolish people cannot be trusted with wealth. Or, perhaps more clearly, the idea that a fool who is given riches will squander them.

"When we speak of fools, we mean people who have no sense. The sensible person, upon receiving a large sum of money, will perhaps choose to use a portion towards a significant goal: for example, a larger house, or improvements to their current residence. They may keep some money in reserve, against sudden poverty. What they do choose to buy may in some part prove to be an investment -- land, or a profitable business. Such purchases will lead to further wealth.

"In contrast, a fool will be short-sighted. He will buy pretty clothes, or jewels, or other such luxuries. He will waste his money on items which give pleasure, but are not necessary, and do not protect against the future. He may come to regret his purchases when the money is gone, and he has need of it for more serious matters.

She cleared her throat. "This statement is, of course, only the writer's opinion; it is meant as a proverb, and not an absolute statement of fact. Some fools will retain their wealth longer than expected, and a previously sensible person may become wasteful in the presence of a windfall. But the saying conveys the notion that those who are foolish will find ways to spend money once they are in possession of it."

She wasn't sure if that was a full three minutes, but it seemed long enough to her, and so she bowed her head and sat down again.
lockestheway: (peter: one day hegemon)

Re: For the Press Secretary! [1/15]

[personal profile] lockestheway 2013-01-15 08:09 am (UTC)(link)
Well, this was hardly going to be a problem. Peter was already wearing a suit - as he usually did - and he mentally channeled several of the politicians he admired as he stepped up to the metaphorical plate with stern-but-fair written over his features.
lockestheway: (peter: aloof)

Re: Speak Extemporaneously!

[personal profile] lockestheway 2013-01-15 08:16 am (UTC)(link)
Peter rolled his shoulders, cracked his neck, and paged briefly through his mental folder of What Would Locke Say. (He might have yoinked a few bits from his first speech in Haiti while he was at it.)

"As we stand here with both feet mired in the midst of uncertainty," he said, "It is the certainties that are most important. It's easy to let paranoia and fear grip our hearts. It's even easier to hide in our homes and go about our days hoping simply that the storm will blow over. But it won't. Not unless we all put our shoulder to the wheel, and plan ahead. The enemy sets its course, and so must all of us in our daily lives, for that's the motor on which our economy runs..."

He managed to plug up those three minutes pretty quickly; he was a charismatic speaker and he knew it, and it was easy to fill in the white space with words based on the geopolitical situation back home-- hinting at terror without specifically defining which.

... Peter was good at speeches.
hasadestiny: ([neu] look at my neck)

Re: For the Reporters! [1/15]

[personal profile] hasadestiny 2013-01-15 08:22 am (UTC)(link)
"Mr Wiggin," Lex started, completely deadpan. "How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?"
hasadestiny: ([lionel] ignoring the lecture)

Re: Speak Extemporaneously!

[personal profile] hasadestiny 2013-01-15 08:24 am (UTC)(link)
Lex's speech? Was awesome, maybe not awesome enough to get him elected in a non election year, but still pretty awesome considering he'd only had a minute's prep.
lockestheway: (peter: b&w off-screen)

Re: For the Reporters! [1/15]

[personal profile] lockestheway 2013-01-15 08:37 am (UTC)(link)
"The woodchuck being a patriotic animal," Peter replied, without missing a beat, "it would chuck as much wood as it requires to make a profit."
glacial_queen: (You're Asking For It...!)

Re: Sign in [1/15]

[personal profile] glacial_queen 2013-01-15 09:32 am (UTC)(link)
Karla
glacial_queen: (Conversation)

Re: Speak Extemporaneously!

[personal profile] glacial_queen 2013-01-15 09:48 am (UTC)(link)
Karla spent the first minute of her speech doing everything that Professor Lyman had just told them not to do: providing too much information, sounding like a know-it-all, doing her best to suggest that anyone who didn't know this stuff was an idiot, and refusing to use any of the suggestions to keep her audience engaged.

Once she'd felt that minute had passed, she stopped, expecting the sudden silence to wake a few people up, and smiled slightly. When she began again, it was in a different tone of voice, speaking to her audience, not at them.

"That, ladies and gentlemen, was an example of how too much communication can lead to none at all. You can throw words at a wall all day if you wish, but that won't make people heed you. In order to engage people's hearts and minds, you don't need to drown them in words and facts and figures, you need to speak to them about the things that matter. Find ways to engage them and interest them; even a speech shouldn't be a one-sided conversation. To truly communicate, one must listen, both to words and tone and body-language and take that into account as well."

"So many people consider words to be the only way to express themselves, but they're incorrect. If pictures are worth a thousand words, then actions are worth tens of thousands..."

She continued to speak about that, using shorter sentences and smaller words, speaking more slowly to let her classmates digest what she was saying.
whenshewasnice: (Rarely this free.)

Re: Sign in [1/15]

[personal profile] whenshewasnice 2013-01-15 10:02 am (UTC)(link)
Natalie V. Adams
whenshewasnice: (Indifferent attention.)

Re: Talk to Josh or the TAs!

[personal profile] whenshewasnice 2013-01-15 10:13 am (UTC)(link)
Natalie wasn't preening at anything, although she was mildly impressed at how well threatening to withhold caffeine worked to get your name remembered. Even if she'd seen that strikethrough further up.

She was still available for anything anyone might need.
whenshewasnice: (Shades of Envy.)

Re: For the Reporters! [1/15]

[personal profile] whenshewasnice 2013-01-15 10:21 am (UTC)(link)
"The gremlins are looking to start a union, and demand full biting rights on both the humanoid population as well as the teal deer, on account of it being part of their species identity," Natalie informed Peter. "The Pro-Gremlin Association wishes to know how you're intending to respond to this."
whenshewasnice: (Hang out with a starlet.)

Re: Speak Extemporaneously!

[personal profile] whenshewasnice 2013-01-15 10:36 am (UTC)(link)
The structure of Natalie's speech could have used a little more refining than a minute allowed her, sure.

But, her delivery was still confident, and she made a fairly convincing case for justifying lying both in a private as well as a more public sphere, using the desire to not hurt someone's feelings when it's not necessary as an example of the former, and the need to keep classified information from spreading in the latter.

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