ENGL 158 - 4-Oral Communication
ENGL 158 - 4-Oral Communication
ENGL 158 - 4-Oral Communication
Oral communication
Department of English
Faculty of Social Sciences
College of Humanities and Social Sciences
Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology
Stage fright
Chairperson’s remarks
Vote of Thanks
Proposal of Toast
Interview
Objectives
• By the end of the lesson, the students will be able to:
1. Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of oral communication
2. Give and explain different types of formal oral presentation used in
Business/corporate communication and our everyday interactions.
3. Identify the stages or process involved in any of the oral
presentations.
4. Show confidence in public speaking.
Oral/Verbal Communication
Definition
• Oral Communication is a type of communication which employs
the spoken word, either direct or indirect as a communication
channel.
• Oral communication implies communication through mouth.
• It includes individuals conversing with each other either direct
conversation, or face-to-face, or over the phone, or via voice notes
or chat rooms, etc.
• Classroom oral presentation and discussions, dramatization, poetry
recital, vote of thanks, interview etc. are examples of oral
communication.
Characteristics of Effective Oral Communication
• “I hate speaking in front of large groups of people, yet I love picturing the
standing ovation after delivering a great speech” (Daniel Waas)
• If you’ve ever seen a documentary about people with phobias, they’re
always told to face their fears. So after trying to think of anything other than
doing just that, I challenged myself to go and speak at large events in order
to overcome my fear of public speaking. (Daniel Waas)
COMMON FEARS WHEN IT COMES TO PUBLIC SPEAKING
• Stage fright can affect not only public speakers but all kinds of people who
have to appear in front of an audience- musicians, dancers, politicians, or
athletes etc.
Signs/Symptoms of Stage Fright
Symptoms of stage fright can occur at different levels:
• Psychological – Sweating, altered heart rate, headache, upset
stomach, chills, nausea
• Cognitive- congestion and mental confusion, fear of failure and
ridicule.
• Behavioural- Urge to escape from the situation, stuttering, frequent
and long silence.
Controlling Stage Fright
• Thank the audience for attending the programme. Say a brief sentence or 2 expressing
your gratitude on behalf of the event.
• Keep it short and to the point. For example at an informal event you could say, "Thank
you to everyone here for coming along tonight."
Thanking/Thanksgiving
• Thanking/Thanksgiving is one of the major types linguistic routines- greetings,
apology, request, thanking, recounting one’s mission etc.
• Thanking is an expressive speech act that states what the speaker feels. Thanks are
rituals employed in communicative encounters to mark the closing of events such
meeting, public debate, lectures, seminars, workshops, invitation to wedding etc.
• After each of the following communicative events, the speaker will say “thank you
for listening and/or thanks for coming.
• Ritualized and institutionalized thank are predictable hence, when one fails to
render thanks, it brings annoyance. Thanks serve as a linking line between giving
and receiving and it is a symbol of love.
• The ability to say thank you in any form is a mark of communicative competence,
depicting how polite one is and brings a bond of social cohesion and solidarity
among the benefactor and the beneficiary (Agyekum 2011).
Vote of Thanks
• This is a structured interview that uses questions designed to probe the candidate’s
past behavior in specific situations. This technique involves asking all
interviewees standardized questions about how they handled past situations that
were similar to situations they may encounter on the job.
• The interviewer may also ask discretionary probing questions for details of the
situations, the interviewee’s behavior in the situation, and the outcome. The
interviewee’s responses are then scored with behaviorally anchored rating scales.
Job-related Interview
• Instead, the interviewer asks job-related questions such as, “Which courses
did you like best in business school?”
Stress Interview