ENGLISH Reading Exercise #37 (Intermediate) Presentation Skills 15 of 28

Improve Your English

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 #37 (Intermediate) Presentation Skills 15 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)

7 Presentation Skills To Enhance Your Image
The following presentation skills cover a wide range of subjects and may even be contested by some public speakers. However, if you want to convey a professional image before an audience, you will do better if you follow these important guidelines:

  1. Pronunciation
    Pay attention to pronunciation. If you don’t know how to pronounce a particular word, check it in a dictionary. Few things can destroy your credibility more than making a major pronunciation error. After all, if you don’t even know how to pronounce the word, how can your listeners have any confidence you know what you’re talking about.
    Online dictionaries have the added benefit of attached audio files, so you can just click on the word and actually hear it being pronounced. One valuable resource is: https://www.thefreedictionary.com/ which provides both British and American pronunciation.
  2. Speak Extemporaneously
    Speaking extemporaneously means preparing in advance but delivering your presentation from an outline rather than reading from a script.
    If you are ever tempted to give a speech or presentation from copious notes, almost reading them verbatim, consider these 4 major benefits of speaking extemporaneously:
  3. Your outline can be flexible and adapted at the last minute.
  4. Extemporaneous speaking keeps the speaker mentally alert, with a subsequent effect on the delivery.
  5. You are able to have excellent visual contact with your listeners, establishing direct eye contact as you look around the audience.
  6. You can enjoy using a conversational, more informal style of delivery, which will develop a rapport between you and the audience.
  7. Visual Aids
    If you decide to use visual aids in your presentation make sure their purpose is to instruct rather than entertain so the audience will feel they are really learning something.
    Visual aids can hold the attention of an audience and make a deeper impression if they are used well. Be sure everyone in the audience can see the visual aid clearly.
  8. Keep To Time
    This is an important one. If the audience knows you have been scheduled 30 minutes for your presentation, a large section will stop listening after 30 minutes. It doesn’t matter how great the material is, a proportion of your audience will have their eye on the clock and mentally switch off once your time is up.
  9. No Obscenity
    Using any kind of obscenity, even for emphasis, is a NO-NO. Hollywood movies may be filled with it, but it only serves to cheapen a public speaker.
    Yes, it may get a few laughs from a section of the audience but the overall effect on you as

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