How to Lecture Well
Lecturing is a teaching method in which one speaker addresses an audience for an extended period of time for educational purposes. Most often used in higher education but also prevalent in professional, cultural, and other settings, lectures can present a challenge to people with little public speaking experience. These steps will teach you how to prepare for your lecture, how to begin a lecture, and how to keep an audience engaged.
Lecture Preparation
- 1Choose a few main points for your lecture. Your audience will learn more effectively if the information presented is organized around key themes, allowing them to relate smaller details to bigger ideas.
- These themes should represent the main educational content of the lecture: what you want the audience to learn in addition to whatever smaller details you provide.
- 2Generate examples that demonstrate these key points to facilitate the audience's retention.
- These might be passages from a text, historical examples, selected data from a report, etc. Choose examples which you can explain fully in a few minutes and which will help your audience to grasp the subject matter.
- 3Decide on a conclusion that you want your audience to draw from your lecture.
- In contrast to the 1 to 3 key points, this will be a question that you want your listeners to consider further, a problem for further analysis, or a thesis or proof that explains the information you have given earlier. Such a conclusion will help your audience retain the other details you include in your lecture.
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- 5Design an outline or lecture notes that cover your lecture material. These will allow you to organize your thoughts in a coherent manner that will be easier to listen to than a scattering of thoughts.
- Do not write out your lecture, as this will lead you to read from your notes and have poor delivery; instead, provide general topic headings and a few key details or sentences that you want to include.
- You should be able to speak freely off of this outline without pausing to review your notes. If there are specific facts you want your audience to retain, be sure to highlight these.
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Beginning the Lecture
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- 2Move quickly from your anecdote or surprising fact to a summary of the information you are going to present so that your audience, while engaged, begins to learn immediately.
- Be sure to mention what the audience should retain from the lecture: either a few broad themes or a collection of facts and ideas.
- Make sure that audience members have time to take notes if they wish. Do not pause for more than several seconds at a time and leave short pauses after major points.
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Ensuring Audience Engagement and Retention
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- The only way to learn how to lecture well is to first understand what it is like to be a listener. Record your own voice and play it back to understand how best to adjust pitch, speed, and intonation, and sit in on other lectures.
- Remember to gear your lecture towards the educational level of your audience. If you are speaking to people with little experience of the topic, highlight broad themes rather than details. If you are speaking to specialists, focus on interesting facts instead of generalities.
- If possible, supplement your lecture with discussion sections or other informal learning environments. Most students can only focus on a single speaker for less than half an hour, and their retention of the information will be greatly increased by diverse approaches.
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Edited by Permasofty, Jmuddy95, Grahamster, Bailar