Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Week 14 Post 3

I believe I will benefit from this public speaking class more than the average. We have weekly meetings in our office and have to report to a large group. I have to present information such as how much business we are getting, or what we can do to improve it, and listen to many comments and questions. I have dreaded the thought of going, especially since I am somewhat new in this field. When I first started, I was told I would eventually have to attend them by myself to represent our company location. Just the thought of being in front of a large group freaked me out. Now that I have taken this class, I’m less worried about the crowd and more worried about the information I will be presenting and the questions to come along with them. This class was my most dreaded, but I am glad it is over with! It really was not as bad as I thought it would be, and I am very glad to be taking half of it online. I have never taken a class half on campus and half online, in fact nothing online.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Week 14 Post 2

My favorite speech was my tribute speech. I enjoyed the fact that it was about someone close and who we wanted to pay tribute to. It seemed more natural to me, and I actually enjoyed writing it which made it easier to speak about. There are other speeches that I have little interest for, like for example our informative speech, I didn’t enjoy writing. Often times I second guessed myself, or had to rewrite many parts to get what I wanted. With the tribute speech, there were many things I wanted to say, but couldn’t fit them all in. I had many directions I could go with, and lots of options. Research papers, like our informative, can be hard especially when developing body paragraphs. You have to find the correct information to go in them, and if it’s slightly off it may not work for the subject or under the thesis. Even though it was short and simple, our tribute speech was by far the most genuine and my favorite.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Week 14 Post 1

I believe the most helpful concept I learned from this class were the techniques used to calm down while giving your speech. For example, channeling your nervous or anxious energy into something positive, such as excitement. Every time I would go up in front of the class, I would tell myself it would be alright and how excited I was to give this speech. Even though it was never true, it helped feeling that way instead of me thinking how nervous and terrible my speech would be. Another technique I found useful was relaxation breathing. When I start to feel nervous I take a couple deep breaths, especially before I go up in front of the audience. To me, these two techniques were the most helpful out of everything we learned. We learned many helpful writing tools to help develop our outline, but my main concern going into this class was my nerves.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Week 13 Post 3

In the speech buddy video 15.1, it covered the four parts in arguments which are the thesis, claim, evidence and  reasoning. Your thesis is always supposed to support your claim, evidence and reasoning. All of this information is review to me, and been the guidelines for speeches and essays for many years. It was nice to see it pinpointed directly in the introduction of a speech though. The speakers in the video had all of those main four points and were all clear. In the schooling pro video, the speaker was very relaxed. She seemed to have been practicing, only looking down at her note cards when needed. She gave many examples, and referenced them properly. Her voice is soft, but seemed like her tone and volume was on key. In the last video, schooling con, the first thing I noticed was his voice. It was very lively, and did not come off boring. His volume was nice and loud as well. He looked at his note cards more than the last speaker, but still made good eye contact with the audience. One thing to me that was distracting was his hand movement, but it wasn't over dramatic.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Week 13 Post 2

From chapter 15, I found the using reasoning effectively interesting. As I mentioned in my first post, mine did not work! There are four different types which I will break down by definition, strengths, and weaknesses. The first type is deductive, which is when the speaker argues from a general or precise case. Its strengths rely on logical reasoning, and weaknesses and invalid premises leading to false conditions. The next type I would like to explain is inductive reasoning. For that you use specific example to general principal. Its strengths are that is visualizes and personalizes the argument. On the other hand its weaknesses and that it might lack representation sufficiency or relevance. Another type of reasoning is casual, which is when you explain how one event causes another. Its strengths are that its useful for explanation and prediction, and weaknesses are it may be incorrect cause and an effective link. The last form of reasoning is analogical. Its strengths are that it draws similarities between two distinct cases, and weaknesses are it might be ignoring key differences.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Week 13 Post 1

Just recently I tried to discuss politics with my friend Shelby. I didn't know she could be so hostile! I am not an Obama fan, and she is. I tried to persuade her into voting for someone else. To try and do that, I continuously asked her what contributions Obama has made to our country, and she couldn't answer. I then later proceeded to tell her how much debt he has put America in, more than all of the presidents combined. That still didn't faze her! On top of that I told her how his last four years in office, unemployment rates have been the highest in the past ten years. After I told her all of this, she only got more defensive. She has a very bias opinion and is too stubborn to change it. Even though I only gave facts, from very credible databases online, I couldn't even at the least open her mind about it. Now I have learned my lesson to never talk politics with her!

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Week 12 Post 3

Every day we are being persuaded. Whether it’s our parents telling us which route to take in life, or someone trying to get you to go somewhere when you really can’t, we are all persuaded and persuade others. The biggest form of persuasion however, I think is media. Magazines, internet, TV and bulletin boards all persuade people where to go, what to buy or how to look. In an English class I took here at Sierra College, my professor spent a good amount of time teaching us how we are all persuaded by media. If you see an ad for drinking or smoking, you usually buy into it by the images. The background is usually filled with models surrounded by wealthy people or places, when in reality advertisers use those to bring people in. Or another example would be those Carl’s Jr commercials. Come on, who really rides a bull, eats a cheeseburger, and looks that good all at the same time? I could go on about the various ways that sex sells, but that’s only one technique the media uses to persuade. To become a deeper thinker about these things, examine the background, colors, language, values, and actions and asses why they use them.