By age twelve months, your child should:
Demonstrate understanding of 3-50 words
By age eighteen months, your child should:
Have an expressive vocabulary size of 50-100 words
By age twenty-four months, your child should:
Have an expressive vocabulary size of 200-300 words
Demonstrate understanding of single words for out-of-sight objects
Understand two-word relations such as: action-object, agent-object, action-object
By age thirty months, your child should:
Understand and use question forms what, who, where
By age thirty-six months, your child should:
Use and understand why questions
Understand and use spatial terms such as in, on, under
By age forty-eight months, your child should:
Use and understand when and how questions
Understand basic shape words
Understand and use basic size words
Use conjunctions and, because
LESSON 1
THEME: Introduction to the subject ,,Oratory and culture of
speech in English’’. Features and stages of science
development
What are oratory skills and why are they important?
Oratory refers to a mastery of public speaking, which requires a variety of strengths
and soft skills, including:
Stamina
Charisma
Empathy
Confidence
Communication skills
When you possess strong oratory skills, it enables you to deliver speeches or
presentations in a way that is effective and impactful. This ability is typically prized
by employers regardless of the industry you work in or the position you hold. By
developing and highlighting your oratory skills, you can demonstrate that you are an
asset to the organization you work for. Here are some tips that can help you develop
your oratory skills:
1. Study great speeches.
One of the best ways to learn and understand what it takes to
be a successful orator is to read, watch and listen to great
speeches. Pay attention to things like how they:
Structure sentences to develop an engaging rhythm.
Choose specific words to create vivid imagery and impact.
Manipulate their voice to emphasize certain points.
Pause after certain words or statements for dramatic effect.
2. Practice public speaking.
Confidence is perhaps the most important aspect of effective oration.
To build your confidence, you need to become more comfortable with
standing and speaking in front of an audience. The best way to
accomplish this is through practice. You should rehearse your speech
aloud and find ways to use your oratory skills in realistic environments.
Feeling adequately prepared also plays a big role in confidence, so
devote time to researching the topic and developing your speech. As
you're delivering your speech, remember that nervousness is
completely natural. Breathing deeply and focusing on the audience are
great ways to calm your nervousness and exude confidence.
3. Use your vocal range.
Using a varied voice keeps your audience interested and engaged
throughout your presentation. Explore your range and decide the best
points in your speech for a little inflection. Once you decide the points
where you should alter your tone, incorporate them into your
rehearsal.
4. Understand the importance of nonverbal communication.
Your vocal projection is certainly important, but you need to be aware
of the body language you're using and how it adds to or detracts from
what you're saying. Your nonverbal communication should convey your
ideas without drawing attention to itself. Use your hands and even
walk around the stage, just do so intentionally.
5. Harness the element of surprise.
Your speech needs to be clear and cohesive, but it should also have a certain
level of unpredictability. This keeps your audience's attention and makes your
presentation much more memorable.
Though it's important throughout your speech, you must grab your audience's
attention at the beginning and end of your presentation. Instead of starting your
speech by simply stating what you plan to talk about, use a striking quotation, an
interesting story or a jarring statistic. While concluding, deliver an impactful and
memorable statement or summary.
6. Showcase your personality.
Allowing your personality to come through makes you a more effective
communicator because it enhances your credibility. When the audience can
connect with you and see you as a real person, it fosters a certain level of trust
that benefits your oration.
7. Believe what you're saying.
Speeches and presentations are typically persuasive in nature, regardless of the
topic being talked about. To build trust and successfully persuade your audience,
you must believe in your message as well.
8. Create an outline.
Having an outline instead of a script is a great way to ensure that
you can quickly and easily find your place and refresh your
memory so that you can avoid looking down too frequently or for
too long. Though it's completely fine to look away occasionally,
maintaining eye contact with your audience keeps them focused on
you and your message.
9. Utilize personal anecdotes.
Typically, audiences respond more to emotions rather than logic.
Even if your topic is highly technical or logical, incorporating
personal stories helps your audience connect with you and your
message. Funny anecdotes can be especially beneficial because
they get your audience's attention.
10. Know and respect your audience.
As you are writing your speech, you must think about who you are addressing.
You should consider things like what they already know about the topic and
the kind of language and stories they would likely respond to. Using this
information, you can create a suitable message for your audience that uses or
avoids certain acronyms or technical lingo. Aside from allowing you to tailor
your message so that your audience can connect with and understand it, this
also ensures that you're able to show your audience the respect that they
expect and deserve.
11. Adapt to audience feedback.
Preparation and practice are vital when delivering a speech, but you also need
to maintain a certain level of flexibility. Focus on your audience, watch for their
reactions and then adjust your message so that it meets their needs. For
example, if you make a statement that leaves your audience looking confused,
you can then spend additional time clarifying your point before you move on.
12. Incorporate visual aids.
When used correctly, visual aids can be a great way to
capture an audience's attention, provide clarity about the
topic and enhance your message. They also pose the threat
of becoming distracting if you use them too frequently, so
use them wisely and sparingly.
There are several various skills that make a great public
speaker, some of which include:
1. Body language
2. Connecting with the audience
3. Delivery
4. Interesting presentation
5. Practice
Speak slowly and enunciate
Speak more slowly than you would in normal conversation to ensure
your words are heard clearly. Be careful to articulate your words.
Pause
Include occasional pauses to give the audience a moment to think
about what you’ve just said. A pause can be especially useful right
after you’ve made a point, explained something or asked a question.
(Example: Pause for a moment after asking, “What type of leader do
you think you are?”)
Use the correct tone of voice
Work on your tone of voice. Speak loudly enough for the group to hear.
Use varying pitch to draw the audience in rather than a monotone voice.
Listen to public speakers you admire or popular TED talks to hear
examples of engaging voice modulation.
Use body language effectively
When speaking in public, body language can help support your speech as nonverbal communication.
Keep your shoulders back and spine straight with a gentle smile. Move around the stage calmly,
moving with the flow of your presentation. Avoid standing behind items like desks or tables, but do not
be distracting to the audience by moving too much. Here are some additional body language tips for
public speaking:
Stand with a relaxed, upright posture. Avoid swaying or rocking back and forth.
Gesture with your arms and hands to make a point or describe details of your story. (Example: Open your
arms out to the group as you say, “This is something we’ve all experienced at one time or another.”)
Move to different areas of the stage occasionally without turning your back on the audience. If you’re at a
podium, angle your head and body toward different parts of the audience as you speak.
Match your facial expression and overall energy to the tone of what you’re saying. For most professional
presentations, you want to exude a pleasant, energetic disposition.
Aspeech is more than a set of spoken words. It’s a combination of the
speaker, the context, the language, and these things working together
can make it far greater than the sum of its parts. In that vein, we
compiled some of the greatest public speakers of all time, people
whose words changed the course of societies and defined eras.
Winston Churchill
When Paris fell to the Nazis on June 14, 1940, England began to steel itself for the brunt of the
Axis powers on the Western front. Winston Churchill, who had taken over as prime minister
just a month prior, delivered his famous “Our Finest Hour” to a country bracing itself for fullscale attack. In 1953, Churchill was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, in part for his
speeches, which he wrote himself.
In his history of World War II entitled “The Storm of War,” Andrew Roberts writes:
“Winston Churchill managed to combine the most magnificent use of English — usually short
words, Anglo-Saxon words, Shakespearean. And also this incredibly powerful delivery. And
he did it at a time when the world was in such peril from Nazism, that every word mattered.”
John F. Kennedy
Few speeches are as oft quoted as John F. Kennedy’s inaugural
address, which he spent months writing. Kennedy’s ability to speak
as if he was having an authentic conversation with an audience, as
opposed to lecturing to them, is one quality that made him such a
compelling communicator.
Socrates
Standing accused of crimes including corrupting the youth of Athens, Socrates had a choice:
defer and apologize to his accusers for his alleged crimes, or reformulate their scattered
accusations into proper legal form (thereby embarrassing his accusers) and deliver an exhaustive
defense of the pursuit of truth, apologizing for nothing. He chose the latter and was sentenced to
death. Part of Socrates’ “Apology” includes:
“How you have felt, O men of Athens, at hearing the speeches of my accusers, I cannot tell; but
I know that their persuasive words almost made me forget who I was – such was the effect of
them; and yet they have hardly spoken a word of truth. But many as their falsehoods were,
there was one of them which quite amazed me; – I mean when they told you to be upon your
guard, and not to let yourselves be deceived by the force of my eloquence.”
Adolf Hitler
Hitler was well aware that mastering the art of public speaking was crucial to his
political career. He wrote all of his speeches himself, sometimes editing them
more than five times. He practiced his facial expressions and gestures, and he
was adept at interweaving metaphor and abstract ideas into his speeches about
political policy.
Martin Luther King Jr.
The strong musicality of Martin Luther King Jr.’s rhetoric is perhaps
just as recognizable as the words “not be judged on the color of their
skin, but by the content of their character.” Martin Luther King drew
inspiration from Shakespeare, the bible, his own past speeches, and
numerous civil rights thinkers to write his “I Have a Dream” speech,
one of the most famous of all time.
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