Contents
As a lecturer, you are particularly challenged in the large lecture hall with your presence
and rhetorical power. It is one thing to have the content clearly thought out and
prepared, but it is quite another to communicate it in a targeted manner using your voice
. In the lecture, body language
and voice must be used to address all listeners directly, even those in the
last rows.
Common problems: shyness and stage fright in large rooms, the view
only reaches the front rows, speaking too loudly and strained
. That doesn't have to be the case: Appearance - voice - free speech on the
lecture hall stage can be trained.
Coaching offers the rare opportunity to train directly in the
lecture hall on your own selected lecture sequences, in a protected
setting, without students. Through personal reflection, feedback
and the joint development of alternative approaches,
the individual presentation style is further developed and refined.
The aim is to speak with presence, commitment and without false effort and
thus reach the audience, inspire them and encourage them to think for themselves
.
Key points of content
- Establishing presence in the lecture hall
- Using posture, movement and gestures effectively on the lecture hall stage
- Making contact with the audience by means of gaze and voice
- Combining presence, contact and free speech
- Speaking extemporaneously and in the prepared
presentation