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UMass CRC - Important skills

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UMass CRC - Important skills

  1. 1. Important Skillz Created by Alex Delegas & Jerad Stahlinski
  2. 2. Public Speaking KNOW WHAT YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT. Remember you represent the CRC, you are the primary source of information about the CRC and the legalization movement
  3. 3. Public Speaking: Pitch Pitch: The tone of your voice. It is high? Low? A low voice may carry better. However, what is most important is not talking in a monotone voice
  4. 4. Public Speaking: Inflection Inflection: Inflection is the emphasis you give each word. Don’t give every world the same inflection because it assigns them all the same value. Remember that your inflection tells your audience how you feel about the topic. If it is exciting sound excited, if it is important convey the urgency. Practice is crucial
  5. 5. Public Speaking: Pace Pace: The speed at which your thoughts are put together out loud. Pace should be slower than normal, speakers may have the tendency to speed up. You want to allow your audience to follow your words. Talking quickly makes what you have to say seem rushed and unimportant. Tips: •talk as if there is only one person in the room, a personal conversation •take lots of pauses between important ideas ideas.
  6. 6. Public Speaking; Articulation Articulation and Pronunciation: Articulation is the ability to produce individual sounds. Plosives: b. d, g, dz (j in jump) and p, t, k, ts, (ch in child), particularly when they end words ex. "white."
  7. 7. Public Speaking: DON’T Say only words! Don't make sounds like "um, uh, er, aaah, like," Filler sounds impart ZERO information
  8. 8. Public Speaking: Writing Speeches Don't read everything! Never read: "Hello. I'm happy to be here." Write how you talk. We don't talk the way we write. Written work can sound stuffy and pompous when being read. Sentences with numerous sub- clauses may look great in an essay, but aren't easily followed in a speech. Besides, why should people sit and hear what they could more easily read? What do you add to prose by speaking it aloud? Avoid clichés (they make your speech sound "canned"), and cumbersome words (What did he say?). Say it simply, straightforwardly, in your very own words.
  9. 9. Public Speaking: Writing Speeches Give yourself written aural hints. It's a script, after all. Give yourself stage directions. Write down hints like "pause" and underline words you want to emphasize. Number the pages. Don't write on the back of pages when you have written on the front. Write or type with VERY LARGE fonts and lots of spacing. It is a script. You will be acting it out. You will not be able to peer at it closely. Speed kills, especially when a talk is loaded with statistics, technical phrases and complex ideas. Reading statistics is safer than saying them from memory. You will sound more trustworthy.
  10. 10. Public Speaking:Content (A) Outline what will be told. Tell them what you're going to tell them. (B) Let the audience know where you are going. "Next, I'll describe..." "Then, I'll show you..." (C) Count: "There are three ways..." "I will tell you two stories that illustrate..." Keep track of those numbers! (D) Refer back to what you said earlier. Tie loose ends together. Remind them. (E) Use repetition. Begin similar points with the same words (but not excessively!).
  11. 11. Public Speaking:Argument (A) Does the evidence you give lead to the conclusion you intend to draw? (B) Don't be preachy (unless you are truly preaching). Don't throw conclusions at the audience. Work up to conclusions with information. (C) Present events chronologically (or in some other appropriate order). (D) Do the events or data build to a climax?
  12. 12. Public Speaking More Info:Visit MIT’s public speaking page for more details, or visit youtube to find more videos about voice. http://web.mit.edu/urop/resources/speaking.html
  13. 13. Elevator Pitch Be Prepared with: •30 Second Elevator Pitch for the CRC or Legalization in General You’re only going to have 30 seconds to make a pitch to a new member at a table, CRC meeting, or event. Have your answer ready KNOW YOUR AUDIENCE •Have one for stoner people, one for more serious students, and one for the Press
  14. 14. Tabling: Setup • Table Cloth o clean it sometimes • Literature o Information CRC or legalization, keep it neat and organized • Merch o Display prices clearly, Print displays ahead of time, keep tshirts folded neatly • Colloquium Banner o looks awesome and we paid too much for it to not be used
  15. 15. General Body Meetings Good Rule: One person has the floor at a time, speaking while someone else is talking is rude. Why? Keep a focal point of conversation Engage Members in Discussion at least once

Notas do Editor

  • Don't end sentences with an upward tone as you do when you ask a question (unless you want to sound uncertain). Beware of the inflections of sarcasm; these inflections usually don't play well and can sound whiny and annoying.
  • Normal conversational speech is done with rapid bursts of sound.
    Public speaking pace should be slower and more deliberate than conversational speech. Aim for a slower pace but not too slow, What may seem to be too slow to the speaker is very likely just right for the audience. The pace you choose may be related to the kind of audience and content of your material.
    Why Pause? Because pausing allows your audience to think, to catch up to what you just said. Sometimes you may not want your audience to absorb what you just said. So keep talking until you come to an idea you want them to absorb. Maybe your delivered bad news or the idea isn’t particularly important. So you continue to talking past the idea.
  • Having notes with you is the safest way to give a speech, especially a long speech or one filled with important points. Those notes should be as helpful as possible. They should serve as a script.
  • Having notes with you is the safest way to give a speech, especially a long speech or one filled with important points. Those notes should be as helpful as possible. They should serve as a script.

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