ENGLISH Reading Exercise #24 (Intermediate) Presentation Skills 2 of 28

English Reading Exercise 24

To improve your English fluency and confidence when speaking, use the Synchronized Reading Method. Be sure to watch the Introduction video in the link above first, to understand the methodology. These English reading exercises will dramatically improve your English fluency.

These exercises are designed for intermediate to advanced students who want to sound like a native speaker. By reading along with the teacher at the same time, with the teacher’s voice superimposed over their own, students start to self-correct in the areas of pronunciation and fluency, learning to read and speak in natural word groups.

If you find the pace is too slow, go to the Advanced version, and repeat until you are fluent in sync with the teacher’s reading.

Here is a transcript of the video: ENGLISH Reading Exercise #24 (Advanced) Presentation Skills 2 of 28

Be sure to watch the introductory video to this playlist before doing this exercise.
Click on the link below in the Description . . .
(https://youtu.be/IOeaBha6dUU)

How To Create A Great Plan
Effective public speaking involves getting the planning stage right. If the foundation isn’t solid, how can the presentation stand up?

The guidelines below can make preparation enjoyable and fill a speaker with enthusiasm for the presentation almost guaranteeing an effective public speaking engagement!

Attention Grabbing Title

To be effective in public speaking you need to create an attention pulling title. This will help focus your thoughts as you develop your outline.

Some recommend selecting the title after you have planned the presentation. Others prefer to do it at the outset, once you have researched the material.
There are various tried and tested formulas for titles that are guaranteed to work.

The How-To style for example never fails to arouse interest.
“How to increase club memberships by 20% in the coming year”
“How to reduce refunds by 50%”
“How to create instant rapport with your prospect”, etc, etc.
Use the word ‘secret’ in the title, e.g. “Secrets of … revealed”.

Or you could use a checklist style, e.g. “7 ways to …”, or “Top 10 ways to …”.
Raising a question is always an attention grabber, e.g. “What is your number one goal for this year?”

Outline Your Presentation
Create an outline of your presentation and use it as a framework for development.
At the top is the theme or subject, then main headings in bold or capitals, and under the main headings sub-points to support them.
Using a computer program makes it easy to re-arrange the order of things until the outline logically flows.

Outline Plans
Here are two possible outline plans when developing your speech.
The first:

State the fact
Develop your argument from those facts
Conclude with an appeal for action
The second:
Highlight something that is wrong
Provide solutions and show how to remedy the situation
Appeal for action to implement the solution

Plan The Outline
Effective public speaking also involves looking over your outline in the preparation stage and allocating specific time frames for each section.
Make sure the timing of each section is properly proportioned so you spend sufficient time on the body of the presentation and your main points rather than spending undue time on the introduction and conclusion.

Get The Order Right
Consider closely the order of your main points and sub-points. Are some points listed too early in your outline? Would the audience need more background before you present that main point?
Continue ordering and re-ordering your information until it makes practical sense and follows logically.

In Conclusion
Just following these guidelines in the preparation stage will go a long way in making you effective in public speaking. Your presentation will have aim and focus, filled with solid information you feel eager to get over to your audience.

Taking a little time to get the planning stage right will have a huge impact on your progress as you continue to develop an effective public speaking style.

Next: Part 3 of 28
4 Ways To Control Public Speaking Anxiety