body language and voice variety in teaching

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BODY LANGUANGE AND VOICE VARIETY IN TEACHING

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Page 1: Body language and voice variety in teaching

BODY LANGUANGE AND VOICE VARIETY

IN TEACHING

Page 2: Body language and voice variety in teaching

As teachers we all know that our voice is a teacher’s most

valuable asset.

   With our voices we transmit not only information, but also mood, atmosphere and emotions.

Page 3: Body language and voice variety in teaching

How we speak and what our voice sounds like have a crucial impact on classes.

Students respond inappropriately when they feel that the teacher’s voice is patronising, too loud, monotone or weak. 

Page 4: Body language and voice variety in teaching

If a teacher is having problems with his or her voice, that discomfort or pain is transmitted to the students.

EVERYONE IS SUFFERING!

Page 5: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Expressive voices, used in an imaginative way, draw students in and make them want to pay attention and listen.

If such a voice has quality and liveliness, they will be motivated to attend, participate and learn

Page 6: Body language and voice variety in teaching

VOCAL VARIETY

Page 7: Body language and voice variety in teaching

• VOLUME - how loudly or softly we speak

• PACE - how quickly or slowly we speak, and how we use pausing

• PITCH - how high or low in our voice range we go

• TONE - how we adjust the tone of our voice to convey a mood or emotion

Page 8: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Example: Psycology teacher and Investigation of Education teacher

Page 9: Body language and voice variety in teaching

• Mannerisms and habits we don´t realise we have effect our communication.

• • Posture, stance, gestures convey confidence,

shyness, etc.

• Every body has different habits, some people are more inhibited and hardly gesture, others over-gesticulate (like me)…

BODY LANGUAGE

Page 10: Body language and voice variety in teaching

• Practice standing on two feet• Practice standing 'at ease'.• Practice standing tall.• Let your shoulders relax.• Practice breathing deeply

STANCE

Page 11: Body language and voice variety in teaching

• Try to use confident and clear gestures. Small gestures aren´t captured by students. Have in mind that we are on a screen, so everything is smaller.

GESTURE

Page 12: Body language and voice variety in teaching

'When you're smiling, the whole world smiles with you.'

A smile says 'I like being here. I like you.‘

SMILE

Page 13: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Someone tell me something, it´s not the same for a student if my face looks bored, or incredulous

FACE: WHAT IS YOUR FACE SAYING?

Page 14: Body language and voice variety in teaching

IN BODY LANGUAGE: • Open is:

The person who stands on both feet, head held high, chest exposed, and arms by side. In addition when they do gesture, its strong, and they smile where appropriate.

• Closed is:The person who hangs his head, folds his arms across his chest, crosses his legs, rolls his shoulders, fiddles...

Page 15: Body language and voice variety in teaching

The core of correct voice use is proper breathing.

BREATHING

Page 16: Body language and voice variety in teaching

DIAPHRAM BREATHING AND SUPPORT

VS

LUNG BREATHING AND SUPPORT

GIVE EXAMPLE

Page 17: Body language and voice variety in teaching

• Put hands on ribs and breathe in ribs only, shallow, then breathe into your diaphram and feel the difference try to push your hands with your breath. Inhale for 3, hold for 3,, exhale for 3

• Deep breath, exhale focusing on a point across room

• Breath in and out with aaaaa, ooooo, iiiii• Then short a-a-aa, o-o-o-o, i-i-i-i• Then mmmmmm, nnnnnn

Page 18: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Warm-ups• Yawn!!!• Sighing

• Toungue exercises • Humming• Floppy jaw

Page 19: Body language and voice variety in teaching

• papapa/bababa/tatata/dadada/kakaka/gagaga

• The tip of the tongue, the teeth and the lips

• Make me many, many more

• Hot coffee in a proper copper coffee pot

Page 20: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Too quickly Too slowly

Variety is the key! Not an average speed.

RATE

Page 21: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Exerpt from article about synaesthesia

Olympia Colizoli doesn’t see the world like you. “To me, all time and numbers are arranged in physical space. Days, weeks, months, years, centuries all have shapes, and I use those shapes to organise my mental plan,” she says. “It took me a long time to realise other people didn't think in this way.”

Page 22: Body language and voice variety in teaching

• What parts of this text would you say quickly, what parts would you say slowly?

Page 23: Body language and voice variety in teaching

PITCH

ONE-NOTE CHARLIE

Page 24: Body language and voice variety in teaching

THE SIREN AND

THE SEE-SAW

First siren noise, then see-saw speaking

Page 25: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Pitch Experimentation:

Her Grandmother died yesterday.

I want a new car.

This dinner is delicious.

Page 26: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Repeat the words 'Ham Sandwich' in as many varying ways as you can.

For example say it angrily, happily, sadly, lovingly, despairingly, laughingly, importantly, slyly, snidely, shyly ... PAIR WORK!

TONE THE HAM SANDWICH

Page 27: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Extension Ham SandwichUse the phrase to 'converse'. Take an emotional state and build a whole conversation around the phrase 'Ham Sandwich'.

For example:Imagine you've just seen the most exciting thing. You want to share that experience with a friend. You ring to tell them. The catch is you must use the words 'Ham Sandwich' to convey your feeling and NO others.

Try consoling using 'Ham Sandwich' or congratulating. Experiment with as many different ways as you can.

Page 28: Body language and voice variety in teaching

And yet Another Ham Sandwich:

This time take two opposite emotions, for example: happy - sad or angry - contented...

Start with one emotion and gradually switch to the other. Make sure you grade the switch.

Page 29: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Good breath control is fundamental to raising the volume while maintaining tone and pitch

VOLUME

Page 30: Body language and voice variety in teaching

•Laugh Out-loud:

• Breath in. On out breath begin a series of Ha-ha-ha-ha's until all your breath is used.

• Take an in breath and start again. Vary your laughter. Make it louder, make it quiet and then build it up again. -

Page 31: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Distancing Technique for Projection

With a partner, stand close together and say “Hello ______” Take a few steps back, repeat….

Imagine the sound arcing through the air, in a concentrated focused stream to reach its target. The further away you get, the more control you need to have over the outflow of air carrying your words.

When you think you have a neutral 'Hello _____' mastered, add emotional color, nastily, lovingly, sweetly ...

Same with more text

Page 32: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Become the character of the story, feel what he/she feels

CHARACTERIZATION TECHNIQUES FOR STORYTELLING

Page 33: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Remember: small or subtle changes won't communicate rapidly to an audience. This is not film.

What do you do when you´re happy, nervous, angry, sad (with your face, body)

Let´s think of different emotions and express them

MATCHING MOOD ANDBODY LANGUAGE

Page 34: Body language and voice variety in teaching

Crossing the line

Practice shifting states rapidly. (2 emotions)

Page 35: Body language and voice variety in teaching

• First act out a mood with your body, get into the stance, then add voice (try bored)

• How does a voice change depending on mood? In volumen, rate, pitch and tone?

• Ex: Angry is faster, louder, maybe higher pitched or lower depending on character

INCORPORATE VOICE

Page 36: Body language and voice variety in teaching

A shy girl or boy? An overconfident man or woman? How would these characters react differently to happiness, anger, ets..

WHO IS YOUR CHARACTER?

Page 37: Body language and voice variety in teaching

THE THREE LITTLE PIGS

How would the different characters talk? How would the voice variety change (characters, moments of story…)

…..Who wants to read the story to everyone?

Page 38: Body language and voice variety in teaching

• Warm-up• Breathe well• Posture• Keep hydrated• Rest your voice

• Avoid smoke, alcohol, loud places (talking over loud noises

• Force yourself when voice is tired

OCCUPATIONAL HAZARD!