Informative Presentations
Presentation Structure
Glossophobia
Language & Phrases
Review & Strategy
100

What is the main goal of an informative presentation?

To explain facts, data, or ideas clearly to a specific audience.

100

What are the three main parts of a presentation?

Introduction, Main Body, Conclusion.

100

What is glossophobia?

The fear of public speaking.

100

What’s a good phrase to start your presentation?

“Good morning, everyone. Thank you for being here today.”

100

Why is practicing delivery important for presentations?

It helps with timing, clarity, and confidence.

200

Give two examples of informative presentations in business.

Sales reports, product updates, company overviews, or market research summaries.

200

What’s the purpose of outlining your structure in the introduction?

It helps the audience follow your presentation more easily.

200

True or False: Glossophobia only affects shy people.

False.

200

What’s a good phrase to introduce your topic?

“Today, I’ll be talking about…”

200

What is a “takeaway message”?

The key idea the audience should remember after the presentation.

300

What are two things that make a good informative presentation?

Clear organization and confident delivery (also: strong visuals, focused message).

300

Name two ways to make your conclusion strong.

Summarize key points, give a quote, call to action, return to opening story, reflective question.

300

Name two reasons students gave for feeling nervous about speaking.

Fear of mistakes, fear of being laughed at, lack of practice, past criticism, cultural background.

300

What can you say to signal you're moving to the next point?

“Let’s move on to the next point.”

300

What is an “attention-grabber”? Give one example.

The first part of the presentation meant to interest the audience (e.g., story, question, surprising fact).

400

Name two differences between informative and persuasive presentations.

Informative = explain facts; Persuasive = change opinions or motivate action.

400

What are two tips for handling the Q&A part of your presentation?

Invite questions, clarify, admit when unsure, redirect off-topic questions, confirm understanding.

400

What is one way students can start overcoming glossophobia?

Practice with purpose, know your audience, prepare ideas, join a club, watch good speakers.

400

What can you say when you don’t know the answer to a question?

“I don’t have that information now, but I’ll follow up after the session.”

400

Why are visuals important in informative presentations?

They help explain complex ideas more clearly and make content engaging.

500

According to McLean (2003), what are two steps to create an effective informative presentation?

Choose a clear topic, understand your audience, structure your ideas, use visuals, practice delivery, etc.

500

What are some ways to start the main body of a presentation engagingly?

Use a surprising fact, rhetorical question, short story, or present a challenge.

500

Why might students from some cultures feel more nervous about speaking?

In some cultures, children are taught not to speak when adults are talking, so speaking in public feels unnatural.

500

What’s a good phrase to leave a strong impression at the end?

“Thank you for your time and attention — I truly appreciate it.”

500

What advice would you give to a classmate with glossophobia?

Answers may vary.

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