Speaking Checklist for Different Settings
Purpose
This checklist helps you adjust the way you speak so people can hear and understand you in different situations. Good speaking is not about having one ‘perfect’ voice. Different voices sound different, and that is normal. The goal is to make your message clear for the setting you are in.
Step 1: Check your pace
1. Start at a steady pace. If you speak too fast, words can blur together. If you speak too slowly, listeners may lose the thread of your idea.
2. Pause between ideas. A short pause helps your listener follow what you mean. It also gives you time to breathe and think.
Step 2: Check your volume
3. Match your volume to the space. In a small room, you should use a calm speaking voice. In a larger room or outside, you may need to speak more strongly so your words carry.
4. Do not confuse loud with clear. You do not have to shout to be heard. Clear speech usually works better than extra noise.
Step 3: Check your clarity
5. Shape your words carefully. Open your mouth enough for sounds to come through clearly. This does not mean changing who you are. It means helping your listener catch the important words.
6. Stress key words. If you are giving instructions or sharing information, say the most important words a little more clearly or slowly.
Setting examples
- In a library discussion, use a quiet volume, a steady pace and clear words.
- On a playground, use a stronger volume and shorter sentences because there is more background noise.
- In a class presentation, pause between points so your audience can keep up.
- When speaking to someone one-on-one, watch their face and check if they seem confused.
Try this
Practice saying the same sentence in three settings:
- ‘Please bring your worksheet to the front table.’
- Say it as if you are in class.
- Say it as if you are outside.
- Say it as if you are helping one classmate nearby.
Troubleshooting tips
- If people ask ‘What?’ often, slow down a little.
- If people lean in, your volume may be too soft.
- If your words feel rushed, pause at the full stop.
- If speaking is harder for you on some days, you can still use these steps in a way that suits your voice.
Check your vocabulary knowledge
- steady adj.
- even and not too fast or slow
- blur v.
- run together so words are hard to hear
- thread n.
- the main line of an idea
- stress v.
- make a word stand out more
- background noise phr.
- other sounds that make listening harder