Page 1 of 1

Take this very article for example.

Posted: Sun Jan 05, 2025 6:48 am
by najmus96
The problem I have identified and am answering is: How can I create presentations that audiences will clearly remember?

I know that the content I am writing is not 100% mine since we are basing it on a podcast, but did you know that to create this same article I listened to the recording 6 times? Maybe because I was distracted, maybe because I am not good, but the main point is that this podcast is so well done that it inspired me to write this article and that it pushed me to listen to it several times. I am basically sharing the concepts learned from a presentation and I am talking about them with my reader, you.

To start active learning, we need to stimulate our audience by hong kong phone number data trying to guide their attention with simple words. It is fascinating to discover that if we say X, our listener's mind immediately goes to think about X rather than wandering to other topics.

Guiding the attention of your audience is very important to make yourself understood.
The scientific explanation for this process is that our brain uses a chemical bookmark that allows it to remember that when it encounters problem X, the memory is activated and leads us to remember when and where we assimilated that specific information.

Since this is a very important aspect, it must be highlighted that in order to stimulate this process we must give our audience time to think about and experience this problem . Sometimes this result is achieved simply by letting people talk to each other and compare the contents we have presented.