Difficulty: Moderately Challenging
Things You’ll Need:
- The desire to decrease your fear of public speaking.
Step1
First of all, being prepared with your material can help reduce some of the tension. Give yourself plenty of time to research your topic so you don't feel rushed to do everything at the last minute.
Step2
The other side of this fear is being in front of people. This was such a strange thing to me in that the same people I was fine speaking with at my seat suddenly changed when was in front of them! The physical symptoms of this fear--dry mouth, increased heart rate, etc. --unfortunately are hard to immediate stop and have to go extinct over time (with practice). What I found helped at the beginning was what I did before I had to speak. I didn't let worry build. Instead, I would do something fun or relaxing earlier that day such as watch a funny movie. I would still be nervous, but it was easier to control.
Step3
Add some entertainment value to what you're doing. In school and often work situations, people are used to dry, boring material. The bored response of your audience will make you nervous, thinking it's you and not the material. A few jokes that relate to the topic don't hurt, and doing this often caused me to get a better grade. I found this out by accident on a project where I had to fill time, but it works! If you're afraid to try humor, an interesting or unique angle on the material will work as well. Just give it some thought.
Comments
MidniteWriter said
on 4/5/2008 I will be doing this soon and will keep your tips handy, especially the water tip. I have to remember to face the audience and actually glance at them. Thanks for the encouragement.