What Is an Edge Case?
January 31, 2024
Article
This course is part of Good with Words: Speaking and Presenting Specialization
Instructor: Patrick Barry
28,106 already enrolled
Included with
(175 reviews)
Recommended experience
Beginner level
No background is needed
(175 reviews)
Recommended experience
Beginner level
No background is needed
How to hold the attention of a wide range of audiences
How to project a powerful combination of confidence, competence, and charisma
How to arrange your content in clear, memorable packages
How to use a well-tested suite of rhetorical rhythms to enhance your delivery and linguistic sophistication
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Poise is not some elusive or innate characteristic. It’s a series of choices, all of which can help you better connect with your intended audience. This course will help you identify those choices and teach you how to make them in a way that consistently enhances the clarity of your message and the effectiveness of your delivery.
Poise is not some elusive or innate characteristic. It’s a series of choices, all of which can help you better connect with your intended audience. This course will help you identify those choices and teach you how to consistently make them.
9 videos14 readings5 assignments4 discussion prompts
We’ll follow up the “Speaking Stories” we learned about last week with a new, research-filled section called “Speaking Studies.”
3 videos6 readings3 assignments1 app item5 discussion prompts
People who have taken our companion course Good with Words: Writing and Editing may remember some of the rhetorical moves we’ll be learning about this week, including anaphora, epistrophe, and the Rule of Three. But even if these techniques are new to you, I hope you’ll soon try to incorporate them into your various speaking opportunities. There are good reasons why everyone from John F. Kennedy, to Margaret Thatcher, to Martin Luther King relied on them to get important points across.
10 videos4 readings3 assignments3 discussion prompts
Congratulations on making it to the final week of the first course in the series “Good With Words: Speaking and Presenting.” We’ll finish up with some additional material on rhythm and then get a chance to combine rhythm and poise together in a speaking exercise that involves a popular U.S. president, an acclaimed war correspondent, and the 1993 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize.
3 videos5 readings3 assignments1 app item3 discussion prompts
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Reviewed on Dec 3, 2024
a bit easy, but a great course to get started on how to become more articulate and appreciate English literature and speeches better.
Reviewed on May 4, 2023
Great resource. Practical ideas I can use when presenting.
Reviewed on Jul 24, 2023
Easy to grasp and full of resourceful information!
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