Week 13 Post 3
I've never even considered the subject material that I learned about this week before. I don't really have to deal with communication anxiety/glossophobia and so I've never really considered its source. I think this will help me with being a better team leader, coach, and friend to the members of the speech squad who do deal with glossophobia because I will be able to better understand where that comes from and therefore how to best address it with them. I hope that this information will help our team both recruit and retain new members better because often people don't join due to a fear of public speaking and drop out after joining because we can't help them conquer their fear of public speaking. By addressing glossophobia one facet at a time we can be a more helpful and more supportive team.
My question for this week would be, "Which cause of glossophobia is most common?" the reason I wonder this is because knowing more about the causes of glossophobia will allow me and my team mates to address it better and have a plan in place for if someone wants to join but won't until they know how we plan to conquer their fear. I assume that the number one cause is thoughts because rarely do people know what situation they'll be in before they try public speaking so they can't get physiologically nervous, situational nerves, or skill nerves.
My question for this week would be, "Which cause of glossophobia is most common?" the reason I wonder this is because knowing more about the causes of glossophobia will allow me and my team mates to address it better and have a plan in place for if someone wants to join but won't until they know how we plan to conquer their fear. I assume that the number one cause is thoughts because rarely do people know what situation they'll be in before they try public speaking so they can't get physiologically nervous, situational nerves, or skill nerves.
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