Public Speaking Handbook

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Chapter 1 Introduction to Public Speaking


  1. Charles Schwab, as quoted in Brent Filson, Executive
    Speeches: Tips on How to Write and Deliver Speeches from 51
    CEOs (New York: Wiley, 1994) 45.

  2. Louis Nizer, “Reflections Without Mirrors,” as quoted
    in Jack Valenti, Speak Up with Confidence: How to Prepare,
    Learn, and Deliver Effective Speeches (New York: Morrow,
    1982) 34.

  3. Adetokunbo F. Knowles-Borishade, “Paradigm for
    Classical African Orature,” Christine Kelly et al., eds.,
    Diversity in Public Communication: A Reader (Dubuque,
    IA: Kendall-Hunt, 1994) 10; Patricia A. Sullivan, “Signi-
    fication and African-American Rhetoric: A Case Study of
    Jesse Jackson’s ‘Common Ground and Common Sense’
    Speech,” Communication Quarterly 41, 1 (1993): 1–15.

  4. Judy C. Pearson, Jeffrey T. Child, and David H. Kahl,
    Jr., “Preparation Meeting Opportunity: How Do College
    Students Prepare for Public Speeches?” Communication
    Quarterly 54, 3 (August 2006): 351–66.

  5. James C. Humes, The Sir Winston Method: Five Secrets of
    Speaking the Language of Leadership (New York: Morrow,
    1991) 13–14.

  6. Dee-Ann Durbin, “Study: Plenty of Jobs for Graduates in
    2000,” Austin American-Statesman 5 December 1999: A28.

  7. Dan B. Curtis, Jerry L. Winsor, and Ronald D. Stephens,
    “National Preferences in Business and Communication
    Education,” Communication Education 38 (January 1989):
    6–14. See also Iain Hay, “Justifying and Applying Oral
    Presentations in Geographical Education,” Journal of Geog-
    raphy in Higher Education 18, 1 (1994): 44–45.

  8. Value Investors portal. “Warren Buffet on Communication
    Skills,” YouTube (December 6, 2010). Accessed May 14, 2013,
    from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpgcEYpLzP0

  9. Jerry L. Winsor, Dan B. Curtis, and Ronald D. Stephens,
    “National Preferences in Business and Communication
    Education: A Survey Update,” Journal of the Association for
    Communication Administration (September 3, 1997): 174.

  10. University of Wisconsin–River Falls, Career Services,
    “What Skills and Attributes Employers Seek When
    Hiring Students,” (June 4, 2007). http://www.uwrf.edu/
    ccs/skills/htm

  11. Camille Luckenbaugh and Kevin Gray, “Employers Describe
    Perfect Job Candidate,” National Association of Col-
    leges and Employers Survey. (June 4, 2007). http://www
    .naceweb.org/press/display.asp?year=2003&prid=169

  12. Randall S. Hansen and Katharine Handson, “What Do
    Employers Really Want? Top Skills and Values Employ-
    ers Seek from Job-Seekers.” (June 4, 2007). http://www
    .quintcareers.com/job_skills_values.html

  13. L. M. Boyd, syndicated column, Austin American-
    Statesman 8 August 2000: E3.

  14. Herman Cohen, The History of Speech Communication:
    The Emergence of a Discipline: 1914–1945 (Annandale, VA:
    Speech Communication Association, 1994) 2.
    15. Barack Obama, “Remarks by the President at Sandy Hook
    Interfaith Prayer Vigil,” The White House Briefing Room.
    (December 16, 2012). Accessed July 5, 2013, from http://
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/12/16/
    remarks-president-sandy-hook-interfaith-prayer-vigil
    Chapter 2 Speaking with Confidence

  15. Survey conducted by R. H. Bruskin and Associates, Spec-
    tra 9 (December 1973): 4; D. Wallechinsky, Irving Wallace,
    and Amy Wallace, The People’s Almanac Presents the Book of
    Lists (New York: Morrow, 1977).
    2. K. K. Dwyer and M. M. Davidson, “Is Public Speaking
    Really More Feared Than Death?” Communication Research
    Reports 29, 2 (April–June 2012): 99–107.
    3. Steven Booth-Butterfield, “Instructional Interventions for
    Reducing Situational Anxiety and Avoidance,” Commu-
    nication Education 37 (July 1988): 214–23; also see Michael
    Motley, Overcoming Your Fear of Public Speaking: A Proven
    Method (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1995).
    4. Joe Ayres and Theodore S. Hopf, “The Long-Term Effect
    of Visualization in the Classroom: A Brief Research
    Report,” Communication Education 39 (1990): 75–8.
    5. Leon Fletcher, How to Design and Deliver Speeches (New
    York: Longman, 2001) 3.
    6. John Burk, “Communication Apprehension Among Mas-
    ters of Business Administration Students: Investigating a
    Gap in Communication Education,” Communication Edu-
    cation 50 (January 2001): 51–8; Lynne Kelly and James A.
    Keaten, “Treating Communication Anxiety: Implications
    of the Communibiological Paradigm,” Communication
    Education 49 (January 2000): 45–57; Amber N. Finn, Chris
    R. Sawyer, and Ralph R. Behnke, “Audience-Perceived
    Anxiety Patterns of Public Speakers,” Communication
    Quarterly 51 (Fall 2003): 470–81.
    7. Kelly and Keaten, “Treating Communication Anxiety.”
    8. Amy M. Bippus and John A. Daly, “What Do People
    Think Causes Stage Fright? Naïve Attributions About the
    Reasons for Public-Speaking Anxiety,” Communication
    Education 48 (January 1999): 63–72.
    9. Yang Lin and Andrew S. Rancer, “Sex Differences in Inter-
    cultural Communication Apprehension, Ethnocentrism,
    and Intercultural Willingness to Communicate,” Psycho-
    logical Reports 92 (2003): 195–200.
    10. S. S. Shimotsu and T. P. Mottet, “The Relationships Among
    Perfectionism, Communication, Apprehension, and Temper-
    ament,” Communication Research Reports 26, 3 (2009): 188–97.
    11. Graham D. Bodie, “A Racing Heart, Rattling Knees, and
    Ruminative Thoughts: Defining, Explaining, and Treat-
    ing Public Speaking Anxiety,” Communication Education 59
    (January 2010): 70–105.
    12. Amber N. Finn, Chris R. Sawyer, and Paul Schrodt,
    “Examining the Effect of Exposure Therapy on Public
    Speaking State Anxiety,” Communication Education 58
    (2009): 92–109.


Notes

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