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How do you sound to your students? Linda Glassburn, Assistant Professor Cuyahoga Community College Cleveland, OH

How do you sound to your students? Linda Glassburn, Assistant Professor Cuyahoga Community College Cleveland, OH. What is a great communicator?. Are you? Prepared Committed Interesting Do you? Make students comfortable. Prepared.

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How do you sound to your students? Linda Glassburn, Assistant Professor Cuyahoga Community College Cleveland, OH

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  1. How do you sound to your students? Linda Glassburn, Assistant Professor Cuyahoga Community College Cleveland, OH

  2. What is a great communicator? Are you? Prepared Committed Interesting Do you? Make students comfortable

  3. Prepared Assess the knowledge, interests and needs of your listeners. Review the lecture Prepare an outline Use your own material Be prepared

  4. Committed Be yourself Be your best Be persuasive Show your commitment Be committed

  5. Interesting Imagination Don’t be boring Style versus substance Think creatively Be interesting, you must be committed

  6. Make students comfortable Appear comfortable Be positive Stay clear of bad news Accept students for who they are Be comfortable

  7. Do you use fillers when speaking? Do you use the word “OK” after every sentence? Do you use “ah’s and um’s” in your lecture? Do you use proper grammar during your lecture?

  8. Example of fillers The Course Technology 2009 Conference – ah- is in Las Vegas – ah- and this is – ah- my first time in Vegas. I always – ah- look forward to attending the conference – ah- during my spring break. – um- I wish all of you – um- a wonderful time. – ok-

  9. Impromptu speaking Will improve your speaking skills Make you aware of when its time for a break Make you ready to respond to any comment Get your student’s attention

  10. A Great Communicator Practice the way you present information to the students. Try different introductions. Exaggerate the message. Force students to use a specific vocabulary word during each class.

  11. The word of the day Philomath \FIL-uh-math\, noun:A lover of learning; a scholar. It is precisely for the Philomath's that universities ought to cater. --Aldous Huxley, Proper Studies "It's nothing to laugh about," he says. "Strange things happen in this country--things that philosophers and other Philomath's had never dreamed of." --Tomek Tryzna, Miss Nobody Philomath is from the Greek philomathes, "loving knowledge," from philos, "loving, fond" + mathein, "to learn, to understand."

  12. Prepare yourself Opening Body Use the “word” Philomath Closing

  13. Speaking Roles Grammarian Count the “uh’s”, “um’s” and “ok’s” Note that the word of the day is used Timer Times each speaker for 2 minutes – raising hand when there is 30 seconds left for the speaker to close Speaker Speaks impromptu for 2 minutes on a selected topic Evaluator Evaluates the speaker (up to 2 minutes) with a short summary, noting the positives and a statement for improvement

  14. Topics of the day Funniest class moment Favorite vacation Best class taught Why you selected to become a professor? Something that you wish to share with us

  15. Conclusion Be aware of how you sound to your students. Ask a peer to evaluate your lecture Practice impromptu speaking to improve your professional lectures. Attend Toastmasters or Dale Carnegie training Be the professional speaker.

  16. Internet Resources Dale Carnegie Training www.dalecarnegie.com Select, Search locations, select a state or zip code Toastmasters International www.toastmasters.org Select, find a location near you, enter United States, state or zip code American Communication Association http://www.americancomm.org National Speakers Association http://www.nsaspeaker.org

  17. Book Resources Genderspeak: Men, Women, and the Gentle Art of Verbal Self­Defense. Suzette Haden Elgin, Ph.D. John Wiley & Sons Inc., 605 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10158­0012. 1993.  ISBN: 0471580163 How to Read a Person Like A Book, Gerald Nierenberg. Original 1971.   Pocket Books; Reissue edition (December 1982) ISBN: 0671735578 Speaking Your Mind in 101 Difficult Situations. Don Gabor, Simon & Schuster, New York. 1994 ISBN: 0671795058 That's Not What I Meant! How conversational style makes or breaks relationships. Deborah Tannen. Ballantine Books; Reprint edition (January 1991) ISBN: 0345340906

  18. Book Resources How to Win Friends & Influence People, Dale Carnegie, Simon & Schuster, New York. 1982ISBN: 0671723650 When I say no, I feel guilty(bestseller on Assertiveness Training). Manuel J. Smith. Bantam/Non-Fiction; Reissue edition (February 1, 1975) ISBN: 0553263900 Will the Real Me Please Stand Up?: 25 Guidelines for Good Communication.  John Powell, Thomas More Publishing; Reprint edition (June 1995) ISBN: 88347316X You Just Don't Understand: Women and Men in Conversation. Deborah Tannen. Original 1990.  Quill; (July 24, 2001) ISBN: 0060959622

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