我知道你会
已经发到你邮箱了~~主题为3D电影 因为我也刚演讲好 都是我自己做的 所以不会和别人重复发了三种格式给你 一个是PPT 一个是演讲稿 还有一个是TXT格式希望能帮到你~~~
Oo炼狱天使oO
Dear Dr.x(Professor):(前面不要空格)This is 学生名字 from your 课程 class. I did not take all your note on the class.So I am wondering if you can help me to take a look at the PPT. Sincerely,学生名字日期格式应该是木有错的,内容加加减减一下吧
melodyhanhan
英语PPT吸引人的重点有开头迅速抓住听众的心理,PPT上,只写重点和核心方面的内容,论点要有说服力,可适当借鉴一些名人名言。
1、开头迅速抓住听众的心理
我们要做的,就是一开始就把听众关心、在意的点阐述出来。可以设置一些悬念,比如在开头提一两个问题。只要你的悬念设得好,就会提起听众的兴趣。
2、PPT上,只写重点和核心方面的内容
好的PPT,都是很简洁美观的。所以,尽量避免在PPT上添加太多内容,特别是文字。因为,人的集中力是有限的,如果PPT中掺杂着太多的例子、论据,就很容易让听众找不到重点,从而导致注意力不集中。
3、论点要有说服力
我看到一些培训者,总喜欢在讲义内容里草率下定论。记得多年以前的成功学培训课程,就有许多讲师喜欢用这套话术:“只要你每天坚持学习,坚持锻炼,好好对待每一份工作,你一定就会成功,年薪百万不是梦!”
如果你有论点,且想提高可信度,请不要只阐述结果,还要用案例、论据等去证明你的论点是可行的,是合理的。这样,才能提高论点的可靠性。
4、可适当借鉴一些名人名言
许多名人名言,在某种情境内是合理的,具有一定的可读性,所以适当借鉴名人名言,可减少很多论证过程,提升论点可信度。不过使用频率不要太高,避免让听众产生“大道理太多”的厌烦心理。
扩展资料
注意事项
1、大量复制粘贴。
按说从网上借鉴一些案例和理念,是无可厚非的,可有些人图方便,竟整段整段复制,也没根据自己公司情况,做任何增减、修改。
2、将所有的资料内容全放到PPT上。
有些培训者,因担心阐述不全面,或害怕遗漏某些重要内容,就把所有信息都写到PPT里。
3、草率下结论,且没有相关的依据进行佐证。
比如在PPT中说“未来五年,我公司将突破销售量50亿大关”,但并没有讲到相关的步骤、计划、方案等内容去论证这个目标实现的可能性。这样,在听众的眼里,你就是个画大饼的。
曦若若往
This is a contribution by Nanette Stein “Whenever something negative happens to you, there is a deep lesson concealed within it. ” ~Eckhart Tolle I’ve experienced a unique situation that has taught me a surprising lesson about the scope of the human races’ ability to choose love over hate, understanding over anger, and belief over fear. I’d rather not have to tell a story like this, and my wish is that no one would ever have to learn lessons from an experience such as this. You see, my husband’s mother passed away just at the end of June. But she didn’t just die of old age, or a sickness; she was only 61. She was washing her car in her own driveway and was forced into that car and taken. She was a victim of a violent crime; an unthinkable thing that you only hear about on the news. The man that did this has been arrested, ending a nine-day violent rampage affecting many women and their families. Those families, including ours, await the long road ahead that comes with this type of devastation: evidence collection, investigation, trial, and sentencing. My husband and I took his 79-year-old grandmother, his mother’s mother, and flew to where his parents and sisters live. We were able to be with his father and sisters during this time, and we were able to be there for the beautiful funeral and memorial service. Many friends gathered around the family, as there are no blood-relatives in that area. His mother and father are private people, so it was a small and intimate gathering, but much love was shared, and many friends came to the service. I had expected there to be outrage, anger, disgust, even hatred for the man who did this, and possibly even for those of his same race, by some. I witnessed none of those things. There was, of course, shock. There was sadness, remorse, and perhaps some initial anger. I can’t sit here and say I know every emotion that went through each and every person. But I did not encounter outward aggression. I felt only love; a loving presence of unity and togetherness. Beautiful Surprises Can Bloom from Tragic Seeds My husband’s mother was a kind and generous person. Small, delicate, and gentle like a little bird. It is an outrage that this type of thing would ever happen to someone like her, to this family, especially right after my own mother passed suddenly and unexpectedly just three months ago, also not from natural causes, but an unnecessary prescription medication complication. Even though these unbelievable events have shaken me to my core, I have such anunshakable peace about me. I really thought that my husband would have a reversion to anger, that this would destroy all the changes he has gone through becoming this more enlightened person. I thought this event would destroy him in some way, but it hasn’t. He is devastated over the loss of his sweet mother, but to allow such things to ultimately destroy you, well, that is not what she would want, and not what we “believe” in. I’ve been struggling to realize what the lesson could be out of this. I tried all this time to figure out the lessons to be had out of my own mother’s untimely death, and I think I was getting to it. Then this happened, and so suddenly. I was left quite confused. If there are lessons to be learned from tragedy, what is this lesson? We are not always meant to know the why behind the wisdom. Why would she have to go through such a horror for us to learn some lesson? Is there a lesson, or does none of it mean anything? I don’t know why his mother had to succumb in this way or what the exact reasoning is, but I do know we are all connected, and there is some reason behind all of what has happened to my family over these last three months, and there has been an avalanche of events, believe me. Some have said to me, “When it rains, it pours.” This may be true, but I’ve always had faith that everything would be okay. I have learned that the beauty of the human spirit is that it is so strong; it can overcome almost anything. I have learned that love and kindness really do matter—that even when horrible things are done to one another, we can still band together and find forgiveness. Hatefulness does not have to exist, and the absence of it during something like this does not tarnish the memory of the person we mourn; it makes it, and us, stronger. We are much stronger than we think. Time after time the human spirit has had an attempt on its strength and we’ve seen where it has not been broken. We can all be pillars of strength and compassion. You just have to allow it. Allowing your emotion does not hurt you. It heals you; makes you stronger. Spread loving kindness, good vibrational energy, positive emotions, and see what it does for you and those around you. We are an experiment in spiritual evolution. Things that happen to us hurt, I know. I would not be pretentious enough to sit here and speak about rainbows and flowers when life can be so ugly and mean. I’ve been there. My husband and I have endured some of the most devastating things in our lives. And I’m not just talking about the deaths of our mothers. We’ve been devastated by financial loss, personal heartbreaks—troubled times I would never wish on anyone. Almost daily I see other people’s stories about hard times on TV and I still say, “Wow, that’s nothing.” We truly have been through some serious stuff. It took me a long time to let all of that go. I have only just begun to feel the spiritual awakening in myself, off and on since 2008, maybe, with a long period of going back to my old ways in there for probably a year. But once it begins, you can’t ignore it. Once it’s in you, you can’t go back from it; it doesn’t go away. One of the most helpful philosophies I learned was from Eckhart Tolle. He basically stated that it’s not the things that happen to you that your pain arises from, but your reaction to it. I have changed my life based on this and many other writings by Tolle, Dr. Dyer, Louise Hay, and others. Pain invites us to grow. I hated how I felt. I chose to change. It can be done. You don’t have to rush. It will happen exactly as it is supposed to. When you allow yourself to be instead of trying so hard to do all the time, you will be listening to you inner being, and you will finally hear it. You will notice all of the synchronicities happening in your life; the paths to the right destinations for you will open up. We could have crawled into a dark hole and shut ourselves off from the rest of the world after what has happened to us. But we won’t do that. We deserve better. And so do you.