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MBA.Graduate Psychology,PHD in HRM
Strayer,Phoniex,
Feb-1999 - Mar-2006
MBA.Graduate Psychology,PHD in HRM
Strayer,Phoniex,University of California
Feb-1999 - Mar-2006
PR Manager
LSGH LLC
Apr-2003 - Apr-2007
Communication Anxiety Report and Analysis Public Speaking Week 1 1. What does your report seem to suggest about your level of communication apprehension? After reviewing my report it seems to suggest that my level of communication is on average or low. I consider myself open for discussion in small groups, and meetings I feel comfortable in discussing with small groups, but in large rooms or even in front of a crowd of people I feel that my level of communication is poor. I feel that I communicate with one on one communication better and feel more comfortable, I struggle when all attention is on me and I have to get the audience attention this report give me the information that I need to improve my approach next time I make a speech or this information gives me a understanding. 2. What effect do common causes of communication apprehension noted in the reading (e.g. heredity learning apprehension, skill deficit, etc.) have on this? I believe that there are several effects that have common cause on my communication apprehension. Some of which have positive and negative effects. While some people may experience something different, people may not appear apprehensive unless they are exposed to a communication in unfamiliar surroundings and people. Normally we do not face communication apprehension in friendly and safe environment. Some other communication contexts are that some of the major context factors that can heighten this form of anxiety are formality, uncertainty, and novelty. For some individuals, it is not the communication context that prompts anxiety, it is the people in the audience they face. Audience anxiety describes communication apprehension prompted by specific audience characteristics. 3. What are some ways found in this week’s readings and this week’s discussion about managing apprehension that may help alleviate challenges or prove useful? The more you know your material, the more comfortable you’ll be. So rehearse and then rehearse some more. Try mentally rehearsing to the last detail like stunt people do, until you see yourself doing it perfectly. For feedback, practice in front of friends and family or record yourself to review later. You may end up sick of your presentation. Approach the crowd like you’re having a conversation with a friend. Understand your audience, who they are, what they care about, what they want to hear and where they’re coming from. Don’t think about what you want to share. Instead, focus on how they are looking to grow and what experience you can share will help them get what they want out of it.

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