ENGLISH Reading Exercise #36 (Advanced) Presentation Skills 14 of 28

English Reading Exercise 36

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 fast, go to the Intermediate version, and repeat until you are fluent in sync with the teacher’s reading.

Here is a transcript of the video: ENGLISH Reading Exercise #36 (Advanced) Presentation Skills 14 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)

Let Your Body Do The Talking – Gestures
Gestures are an integral part of effective presentations. Rather than standing on the platform like a stuffed dummy, powerful public speakers know how to use their hands, eyes, and body movements to add power to the spoken word.

Here are five suggestions on how to use the body for effective presentations:

  1. Descriptive Gestures
    Use descriptive gestures – gestures that describe size, shape, distance, location, etc.
    Descriptive gestures produce two major benefits: 1) they keep the interest of the audience as you move your hands, arms, body, to describe what you are talking about
    and 2), they enliven you, the speaker, and help raise your level of enthusiasm for your subject.
  2. Emphatic Gestures
    Use emphatic gestures – gestures that stress a key point, key word, or phrase.
    Using the hands or fingers to point or in some other way emphasize a key thought should come naturally throughout the presentation.
    One caution: be careful a particular emphatic gesture doesn’t become a mannerism. If done too often it loses its power.
    You may need a friend or partner in attendance to look out for it and alert you if the gesture is becoming too frequent. Or video the presentation, play it back, and become your own critic, watching out for detracting mannerisms you may be unaware of when in front of an audience.
  3. Express Enthusiasm
    Expressing enthusiasm through an animated delivery with a variety of facial expressions, gestures, and voice pitch contributes a great deal to effective public speaking.
    Enthusiasm doesn’t mean a speaker has to jump around all over the platform. But through the feeling, intensity, and expressiveness of your presentation, the audience will walk out of there feeling conviction, glad they were there.
  4. Vary Enthusiasm
    One caution with enthusiasm – don’t carry it on a high level all the way through your presentation. This will leave the audience feeling exhausted and detract from the effectiveness of your presentation.
    There has to be a reason for your enthusiasm relative to the material. Match your enthusiasm with the points you want to stand out. If everything is presented at the same level of enthusiasm, nothing stands out. The impact loses its impact!
  5. Use Your Eyes
    Our eyes reveal much about us. If a speaker fails to look directly at the audience he or she may appear unsure, lacking in confidence, even lacking in conviction and sincerity.
    So practice good visual contact with your audience. This includes looking around the whole audience, not just fixing your eyes in one particular place.
    In addition to browsing and scanning the audience, look at an individual and get eye contact for a few seconds and talk directly to that person. Then do the same with another individual in another section of the audience. Do this regularly during your presentation.
    Mastering this skill will engage the attention of the audience. It will also provide you with valuable feedback on how your presentation is being received as you take note of the expressions on the faces of those you are speaking to.

A truly animated delivery will set you apart as a public speaker. If you are alive with your subject as reflected in your body movements, gestures, facial expressions and eye contact, you will have the audience focused on everything you say. That’s what effective presentations are made of!

Next: 6 Presentation Skills For Powerful Delivery