Public Speaking

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

The Audience and the Topic (^73)


The Audience and the Topic


Just knowing demographic characteristics does not tell you how listeners will react to your
topic. By taking their psychological profile through direct or indirect methods, you can
discern some of their beliefs, attitudes, values, and behaviors related to your subject.

Direct Methods


Use direct methods by asking the audience members what they think and do, whether
by an interview, a focus group, or a questionnaire. For instance, a commencement
speaker interviewed several students about their campus experiences and their expecta-
tions for the future and then wove this information into his speech. Focus group con-
sultants, especially in politics or organizations, invite a small group of representative
respondents to answer a few questions about a policy or a product.
For classroom speeches, questionnaires are common. Create a paper-and-pencil
test, or use Internet resources such as SurveyMonkey, Zoomerang, or Fluidsurveys that
make it easy to distribute, collect, and analyze data, often free of charge. Although Leif
was personally excited about hovercrafts, he wanted to know how to make his infor-
mation understandable and interesting to first-year college classmates. So early in his
preparation, he created an online questionnaire to assess his classmates’ knowledge
and beliefs about hovercraft technology as well as their attitudes, values, and behaviors
regarding alternative vehicles.
As Chapter 1 briefly pointed out, a belief is a mental acceptance of something as
true or false, correct or incorrect, valid or invalid.^23 Because beliefs are based on study
and investigation, as well as on convictions developed without much factual information
or knowledge, misconceptions are common. Leif used a closed question (one answer)
such as this to gauge his listeners’ knowledge of the topic:
Do you know what a hovercraft is?
Ye s
No
I’m not sure
He followed this with an open question that allowed listeners to explain what they
knew about the physics behind these all-terrain vehicles:
In the box below, tell what you know about the “Summation of Force” or “Net
Force” principle.

Attitudes are our tendencies to like or dislike something or to have positive or
negative feelings about it. Scaled questions typically measure attitudes along a range
or continuum, from highly positive to neutral to highly negative. This scaled question
relates to Leif’s topic:

I am interested in all-terrain vehicles (ATVs).
I-------------------I-------------------I-------------------I-------------------I-------------------I-------------------I
strongly agree mildly neutral mildly disagree strongly
agree agree disagree disagree

psychological profile
assessment of an audience’s
beliefs, values, and attitudes
regarding a topic

direct methods asking
audience members directly
for their opinion by question-
naires, interviews, and so on

belief mental acceptance of
something as true or false,
correct or incorrect, valid or
invalid

closed question request for
a brief, specific answer

open question giving oppor-
tunity for a range of answers
or a more lengthy response

attitudes our tendency to
like or dislike something or
to have positive or negative
feelings about it

scaled questions asking
for responses along a
continuum, used to assess
attitudes

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