Data
Official data in SubjectManager for the following academic year: 2024-2025
Course director
-
Szentpéteri József László
honorary professor,
Department of Rehabilitation and Physical Medicine -
Number of hours/semester
lectures: 16 hours
practices: 8 hours
seminars: 0 hours
total of: 24 hours
Subject data
- Code of subject: OXE-SY1-h-T
- 2 kredit
- General Medicine
- Elective modul
- both
-
Course headcount limitations
min. 5 – max. 15
Available as Campus course for . Campus-karok: BTK ETK GYTK KTK MK TTK
Topic
Improving students' presentation skills.
The aim of the course: theoretical and practical development of students' verbal, non-verbal and visual presentation abilities.
The course provides aids through following key aspects for effective communication:
- Structure of presentation
- Dynamics of presentation
- Basic presentation techniques
- Methods of effective persuasion
- Audience survey
- Questions, handling objections
- Verbal content
- Non-verbal communication / body language
- Raising awareness, maintaining the feedback rating
- The use of visual aids
- Slideshow planning and preparation
- Guidelines for charts, graphics preparation
Lectures
- 1. What is Public Speaking? Aristotle's Guidelines. Ethos-Pathos-Logos. What makes a lecture effective? Preparing the audience. - Szentpéteri József László
- 2. Why are we afraid of public speaking? Historical overview, classification. Evolutionary background. - Szentpéteri József László
- 3. The significance, stages and evolutionary background of the first impression. - Budán Ferenc Csaba
- 4. The catching title. Effective communication and aids: Avoiding foreign words, simple sentences, intense words, thinking, asking questions. - Budán Ferenc Csaba
- 5. The first sentence. The first 30 seconds. Effective Starting Strategies: Interesting / Bizarre Fact, Personal Story, Question, Accessories. Surveying and controlling the audience. - Sik Attila Gábor
- 6. Introduction Packaging the Content. Means of raising awareness and effect. Defining the main message of the lecture. - Sik Attila Gábor
- 7. Attention skill. The challenges of the audience and the possibilities to adapt to them. - Szabó Éva (Biokémia)
- 8. Eye contact. Means of engaging the audience and radiating confidence. - Szabó Éva (Biokémia)
- 9. Tonality. Applying appropriate and systematic emphasis, intonation, emotionality. - Szentpéteri József László
- 10. Speech speed. Applying the right speech rate. Methodology for consciously changing the pace of speech. Methodology of applying rhetoric pause. - Szentpéteri József László
- 11. The Smile. Humor, irony, irony. 1-3-5-7 - A little numerology … - Szentpéteri József László
- 12. Using Visual Devices. How can PSE (Picture Superiority Effect) help to increase the effectiveness of the performance? Use of visual tools II.: Designing and making a slideshow - Szentpéteri József László
- 13. Composition Guidelines. Obtaining and using images correctly and lawfully. Using animations. Using Flipchart, Tablet, Laser Pointer. Guidelines for making charts and graphics. - Szentpéteri József László
- 14. Get off the podium! - Movement in space, distance from the audience. - Szentpéteri József László
- 15. The rules and regularities of personal space in the light of the given artist situation and cultural influences. - Szentpéteri József László
- 16. Body language. Toolkit for nonverbal communication. Appropriate artist gestures. Recognizing audience reactions. - Szentpéteri József László
Practices
- 1. Awareness Tools. Using the first 30 seconds in different performer genres - Szentpéteri József László
- 2. Means of raising awareness. Apply enhancement to different artist genres - Szentpéteri József László
- 3. Use effective volume, articulation and mimicry - Budán Ferenc Csaba
- 4. Artist gestures supporting effective communication - Sik Attila Gábor
- 5. Recognize nonverbal cues from the audience - Szabó Éva (Biokémia)
- 6. Lecture analysis I.: commercials, movie trailers - Szentpéteri József László
- 7. Lecture Analysis II: TED Lectures - Szentpéteri József László
- 8. Lecture Analysis III.: Steve Jobs, Toastmasters presentations - Szentpéteri József László
Seminars
Reading material
Obligatory literature
Literature is not compulsory, but all books in recommended literature list (see below) contain very useful information to provide a more effective implementation of the objectives of the course.
Literature developed by the Department
Course material will be available in Microsoft PowerPoint (.ppt) format after course registration.
Notes
Online education materials will be shared continuously during the course.
Recommended literature
Carmine Gallo: The presentation secrets of Steve Jobs, McGraw-Hill, 2010
Garr Reynolds: The Naked Presenter: Delivering Powerful Presentations With or Without Slides (Voices That Matter), New Riders Publishing, 2010.
Stephen R. Covey: The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, Simon & Schuster UK Ltd., 1999
Edward T. Hall: The Hidden Dimension. Anchor Books, Doubleday, New York, 1966
Barbara Pease & Allan Pease: The Definitive Book of Body Language, Bantam Books, New York, 2006
Conditions for acceptance of the semester
Every participant must prepare a somehow healthcare-related presentation to participate and complete the course. Interactivity and continuous, active participation are key elements to complete the course. The presentation should be a maximum of 3 minutes long (390-510 words) and should be supported with a PowerPoint (.ppt) presentation. Everyone will carry their project only during the course, which should be modified, polished during the course, and uploaded at the end. However, the point of view can vary widely: technology, legal, humanities, natural sciences, etc.
Anyone, who arrives WITHOUT A PRESENTATION will be DISQUALIFIED immediately.
Grades are based on personal development, activity, and attitude during the course.
Mid-term exams
All students must fill a questionnaire at the end of each class.
Making up for missed classes
There is no possibility to substitute a missing course.
Exam topics/questions
All students will present in front of the instructor and fellow students for up to 5 minutes duration. Everyone is free to choose their own topic.
Both the instructor and the audience evaluating the presentation on pre-built scorecards up to 3 minutes duration.
Evaluation sheet contains general and topic-specific questions.
General questions are practically certain criteria, which should be evaluated from 1 to 10, where rate "1" is the worst and "10" is the best. General issues are as follows:
1. Welcoming audience
2. Link building and maintaining relationship with the audience
3. Arousing the interest (the first 30 seconds). In other words, has the presenter attracted your attention so much, that you would follow the complete presentation? (Themes, raising questions, humor, etc.).
4. Was the presentation interesting enough, that you want to know more about the topic?
5. The verbal performance of the speaker (Speech, volume, avoiding foreign words, etc.).
6. Nonverbal performance of the speaker (clothing, gestures, "theatrical" behavior)
7. Using Technical Aids - if any (did they fit and whether they helped the understanding).
8. Use of visual aids - if any (did they fit and whether they helped the understanding).
9. Overall, how would you rate the show?
The subject-specific issues are not public; they will be completed by the instructor based on the submitted text and will be available on the day of the exam only.
Examiners
Instructor / tutor of practices and seminars
- Budán Ferenc Csaba
- Graff Andreas Bergheim
- Sik Attila Gábor
- Szabó Éva (Biokémia)
- Szentpéteri József László