Public Speaking

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

10 CHAPTER^1 Introduction to Public Speaking and Culture


person’s achievements, or make your audience laugh. You craft your message in lan-
guage your audience will understand, using reasoning they accept and illustrations
that relate to their lives.
• The face-to-face, voice-to-ear channel, along with nonverbal channels such as ges-
tures or tone of voice, is the most common in classrooms. In other settings you might
speak in a videoconference or record your message digitally and upload it to a file
server or Internet site where your audience can listen at their leisure.
• Receivers-senders hear your words and decode or interpret them. They create meanings
out of their personal backgrounds and heritages, plus their individual beliefs, values,
worries, and judgments.
• Your audience sends feedback. Face-to-face audience members can ask questions, nod,
frown, smile, or clap. Some may even heckle you. You decode their feedback and
adapt to it. For example, if you see confused faces, you might add details to clarify
your point. Were you to use another channel, such as YouTube, feedback would come
in the form of written remarks below your video. In this transactional process of
mutual sending-receiving-responding, you and your listeners cooperate in creating
meaning.
• Noise, or static, can interfere with both the message and its reception. A mild case
of laryngitis might make your words difficult to hear. A lawnmower outside the
window (external noise) might overwhelm your words. Internal noise, such as listeners’
worries about being overdrawn at the bank or their hunger pangs, can also disrupt
the process. Finally, cultural noise occurs when cultural differences make the message
irrelevant or offensive, as when the topic or the manner of the presentation runs
counter to a listener’s cultural norms.^45
• Each speech takes place in a specific situation. During the term, you’ll speak in a
classroom or perhaps an online setting. But in the workplace or community, the
situations will be more varied. Regardless of the context, room temperature, light-
ing, room decor, available technology, and seating arrangements all can affect your
presentation.
• Finally, as this chapter explained, each speech takes place within a larger cultural
framework. Class speeches come with expectations about grades and higher

Cultural frame

Noise

Noise Noise

Encodes message

Decodes feedback Encodes feedback

Sender Specific situation Receiver(s)

Decodes message

Feedbac
k^ ch
an
ne
l^

Message

(^) cha
nn
el
Figure 1.2
The transactional model
depicts communication as a
dialogical process in which
communicators co-create
messages in culturally
appropriate situations.
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