首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
What to Do with Your Hands When Speaking in Public A) Somewhere along the way, most of us have been given advice about public s
What to Do with Your Hands When Speaking in Public A) Somewhere along the way, most of us have been given advice about public s
admin
2021-12-15
36
问题
What to Do with Your Hands When Speaking in Public
A) Somewhere along the way, most of us have been given advice about public speaking that goes something like this: Don’t use your hands too much. Just keep gestures to a minimum so people can focus on your words. Yet research shows that it’s actually effective for a presenter’s hands to do plenty of "talking". They just need to be saying the right thing.
B) For instance, consultant Vanessa Van Edwards studied famous TED talks and found that the ones that went viral and became wildly popular featured the speakers who used their hands the most. The least-watched TED talks had an average of 124,000 views and used an average of 272 hand gestures. The top-ranked ones, meanwhile, had an average of 7. 4 million views and 465 hand gestures during the same length of time.
C) The problem for most people, of course, is figuring out how to use the right gestures that reinforce their verbal message—all while anxiously trying to remember what to say. So what’s effective and what’s distracting? On Leadership checked in with five speech coaches and body language experts to better understand the right and wrong ways to use your hands when you’re speaking in front of a crowd.
D) "Do what comes naturally" may be common advice from presentation coaches, and it’s easy to see why they say it: Get too choreographed with your gestures, and you’ll forget your speech or look like a seven-year-old pantomiming to pop radio.
E) But there are some instances where having a pre-planned descriptive gesture at the ready can really help. If you’re talking about a small thing, pinch your fingers. If it’s a really big point, don’t be afraid to gesture your hands in the air. To help audience members keep track of what you’re saying, hold out one hand to describe the benefits of an issue and then the other to describe a list of downsides, Van Edwards suggests.
F) One of the few universal recommendations we heard was to make outstretched gestures to the audience with open palms. That may be because it has evolutionary underpinnings. Mark Bowden, president of a Toronto-based communications training firm, refers to it as "no tools, no weapons. " Everything from the handshake to the "hands up" movement people give to police provides proof that you have nothing to hide. "If I’m showing open palms, it signals to everybody that I’ve got nothing to harm you and I’m exposed," he says.
G) Generally, it’s a good idea to keep your hands in what some speech coaches refer to as the "strike zone"— a baseball reference that in presentations refers to the area from your shoulder to the top part of your hips. "That’s the sweet spot," says Van Edwards. "That’s a really natural area for you to gesture. " Going too wide or too high with your arms too often can be distracting, but again, presentation experts say it’s not a hard and fast rule. Keep it in mind, but don’t worry about breaking it occasionally.
H) Meanwhile, one of the few repeated no-nos we heard was to avoid pointing. It can look aggressive, unwelcoming and off-putting to many in the crowd. "Audiences hate it," Van Edwards says. It’s enough of a problem, in fact, that some politicians have created substitute gestures to avoid it. For most people, it’s better to find a descriptive or more open gesture to emphasize a key issue.
I) However prepared you may be, there inevitably comes a moment when you realize you’ve done exactly what you shouldn’t. Perhaps you’ve spent the last five minutes pointing, or something just doesn’t feel right with the gestures you’re using. When that happens, says Jerry Weissman, a San Bruno, Calif.-based corporate presentations coach, he tells people to briefly drop their hands down to their sides. It serves as a reset button of sorts. "It’s like home base for the arms," he says. But only keep them there temporarily—" touch and go," as Weissman calls it. As with most of this advice, everything in moderation is fine. But speakers who spend too much time clasping their hands in front of their groin area—often out of not knowing what to do—inevitably draw attention to the wrong place. Moreover, it keeps their hands still and unable to be used in more effective ways. Weissman calls it the "fig leaf," and again suggests breaking the habit by dropping arms to the side for a brief moment.
J) People writing a great speech are careful to mix up the length of their sentences, the tone of their voice and the volume of their words. It’s important to do the same with your hands, avoiding repetitive gestures such as slicing the air or chopping it into an open palm for more than a moment or two. Women in particular should be careful of it, says Van Edwards. Research has shown that women’s voices stimulate parts of the male brain used to decipher music. " If a woman has a very repetitive gesture, it could make it seem like she’s not saying anything new, that she’s droning on and on" to the men in the audience, Van Edwards says, as they are already prone to hear her voice as more singsong. " A metronome-like gesture actually encourages that thought, even if she is saying something different. "
K) Standing behind a big furniture piece might make some people feel safer, but it causes problems for others. Gripping the top of the lectern, revealing white knuckles as you steady your nerves, or making low hidden gestures that can’t be seen by the audience are all common blunders. Instead, hands " should be out and alive and moving and not holding on for dear life, " Barnett says. Either rest them on the lectern lightly or use gestures the audience can see.
L) Hiding your hands isn’t a good idea away from the podium, either. Van Edwards remembers one client who was seen as cold and intimidating by his team. After sitting in on a few meetings, she noticed he regularly held his hands behind his back while talking. " As soon as he pulled his hands out from behind his back, the amount of discussion and length of it increased two-fold," she recalls. "I can’t say it was only that, but it was the clearest moment where I was like ’ wow, [ showing our hands] really does something subconscious in our brains that helps us trust. ’ "
M) German Chancellor Angela Merkel has a trademark hand gesture, one so well known that it has inspired Internet memes and emoticons, has its own name and has even been depicted on a giant political campaign billboard. She holds her hands in front of her midsection, fingertips and thumbs typically touching in a diamond shape with the fingers pointed down. It may somehow work for Merkel as her signature gesture, but others should avoid it. Generally, touching the finger tips—what Barnett calls "spider hands"—can look tense and unrelaxed. A branded gesture like Merkel’s can " feel sort of stagey," she says, and is distracting to the audience.
N) And then, of course, there’s the risk of unintended meaning. Pointing the thumb and index fingers together in a diamond shape is similar to the sign language gesture for a part of the female anatomy. And that’s exactly the kind of confusing signal no speaker wants to send.
Holding hands behind the back when giving a speech may reduce the confidence level of the speaker.
选项
答案
L
解析
由题干中的holding hands behind the back定位到原文L)段。细节归纳题。L)段第三句提到一位讲话者经常在说话时将双手背在身后,之前作者也提到这个人因此给人冷漠和疏远的感觉,作者还指出,当他终于将双手展现出来的时候,观众在潜意识中提升了对这个人的信任。题干中的confidence level对应原文中的helps us trust,故选L)。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/tfaFFFFM
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
ScientistsscanningandmappingtheGizapyramidssaythey’vediscoveredthattheGreatPyramidofGizaisnotexactlyeven.Bu
WhenElonMusksaysthathisnewpriorityisusingartificialintelligencetobuilddomesticrobots,weshouldlookforwardtot
Theideaoftaxingthingsthatarebadforsocietyhasapowerfulallure.Itoffersthepossibilityofadoublebenefit—【C1】____
A、Hewantstotellthewomanwhatstepsshouldbetaken.B、Theexperienceisbeneficialforoverseastourguides.C、Hehashandl
A、Arrangingcamerasandbelongings.B、Providingservicesoftransportation.C、Offeringthepracticalexperience.D、Coordinating
A、Arrangingcamerasandbelongings.B、Providingservicesoftransportation.C、Offeringthepracticalexperience.D、Coordinating
A、Polishingtheirapplicationforms.B、Broadeningtheiroptionsofcolleges.C、Benefitingfromalow-costschool.D、Workinghard
A、Travellingabroad.B、Improvingculturalawareness.C、Raisingfund.D、Learningteachingapproaches.C本题问的是目前女士在这个项目中做什么。在谈论了参加项
A、Hisbackground.B、Hisproperty.C、Hisbelief.D、Histalent.C
A、Stopinthemiddleoftheclass.B、Speedupthepace.C、Marchinplaceforawhile.D、Concentrateonexercise.C短文谈到,如果你在有氧课里太
随机试题
完全素食者因摄入维生素B12缺乏,症状出现需一部分N5-甲基四氢叶酸经胆汁排泄到小肠后重吸收,即
A.鲜地黄B.生地黄C.熟地黄D.生地炭E.熟地炭补血止血宜用
心跳骤停过程中首选的复苏药物是
构造柱与砖墙接槎处,砖墙应砌成马牙槎,沿高度方向尺寸不应超过()
X公司与Y公司订立的买卖合同中约定:X公司向Y公司购买西服价款总值为9万元,X公司于8月1日前向Y公司预先支付货款6万元,余款于10月15日在Y公司交付西服2日内一次付清。X公司以资金周转困难为由未按合同约定预先支付货款6万元。10月15日,X公司要求Y公
为节约用水,某市决定用水收费实行超额超收,月标准用水量以内每吨2.5元,超过标准的部分加倍收费。某用户某月用水15吨,交水费62.5元。若该用户下个月用水12吨,则应交水费多少钱?()
Iamawriter.Ispendagreatdealofmytimethinkingaboutthepoweroflanguage—thewayitcanevoke(唤起)anemotion,avisu
根据以下资料。回答下列问题。在四个企业中,年利润最高的比最低的多几倍?
在窗体中要显示一门课程的基本信息和选修该课程的学生,窗体设计时要在主窗体中显示课程的基本信息,在子窗体中显示选修该课程的学生名单,则主窗体和子窗体数据源之间的关系是()。
WilltheEuropeanUnionmakeit?Thequestionwouldhavesoundedstrangenotlongago.Noweventheproject’sgreatestcheerlead
最新回复
(
0
)