Understanding And Using your Voice To Advantage

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Telephone Skills Workshop > Nature of Communication The telephone as a Communication Tool Good and Poor Telephone Communicators Factors of Voice Active.
Advertisements

Public Speaking I Teacher: Mr. Smith Room # E-409
The speech mechanism.
Using Your Voice Notes for Sept. 3rd To produce sound, the lungs, mouth and throat work together to do three things… 1.Generate sound 2.Resonate sound.
English Phonetics and Phonology Presented by Sergio A. Rojas.
Vocal Production & Articulation Chapter 7-Drama Projects To build and use proper breathing and articulation and produce quality vocal tone.
VOCAL QUALITIES By: Mrs. Bone. NASAL Nasal- stems from a lazy soft pallet.
Respiratory System.
Misc. Voice The Diaphragm Parts of the Mouth Inflection
Your Vocal Instrument.
English Phonetics Class THE VOCAL ORGANS The principal organs which take part in the production of speech sound are: 1.Lungs 2.Mouth 3.Throat.
Vocal Mechanism Review What are the five parts of your vocal mechanism? diaphragm lungs vocal chords resonators articulators / shapers.
TheHumanVoice11. The Human Voice  MESSAGES are:  Packages of information  Can be:  Verbal  Non-verbal We’ve discussed NONVERBAL messages and now.
USING YOUR VOICE Unit 1 Section 3a.
The Basic Actor’s Training Program: FREEING. An actor’s work in freeing is designed to limber, align, and strengthen an actor’s body in an integrated.
The Actor’s Tool The Voice. Warm-up Breathing exercises – deep breathing Breathing exercises – deep breathing Facial stretches Facial stretches Articulation.
{ Vocal Production Freeing the Natural Voice.  gCvW8PRY gCvW8PRY
YOUR BODY DURING THE SINGING PROCESS Your name(s):
VOICE AND DICTION.
Introduction and Upper Respiratory Tract Prof. K. Sivapalan.
Acting I Topeka West High School Mr. McCoy – Fall 2008.
Unit 2B, Part 3.  Your voice must be:  Loud enough to be heard  Flexible enough to add subtle layers of character, emotional texture, and meaning to.
Vocal Presentation By Laura Shelley Becky Winship Tonia Tolley.
The Structure and Physiology of the voice
Voice & Diction.
Voice and Diction Chapter 3.
Speech organs in English Ms. Rasha Ali. How the speech organs work in English? Nasal cavity lips Teeth Larynx Palete Tongue Pharynx Vocal cords.
MISC.
Public Speaking: V OICE.
Linguistics The fourth week. Chapter 2 The Sounds of Language 2.1 Introduction 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Phonetics 2.2 Phonetics.
PHONETIC 1 MGSTER. RAMON GUERRA by: Mgster. Ramon Guerra.
Anatomy and Physiology of the Speech Mechanism. Major Biological Systems Respiratory System Laryngeal System Supralaryngeal System.
JABBERWOCKY Lewis Carroll (from Through the Looking-Glass and
Soran University- College of Education English Department Articulatory phonetics/Speech organs Talib M. Sharif Omer Assistant lecturer
Sounds in different patterns How do language organize sounds to distinguish different words? How do languages restrict, constrain of sounds? How are sounds.
 Properties of Sound Waves. Loudness  Loudness describes your perception of the energy of a sound.  Loudness depends on :  The amount of energy it.
Confidence Physical Vocal. How do you know that you know how to do something? How do you gain a skill?
Vocal Terminology BEGINNING DRAMA. Diaphragm: A large flat muscle that separates the lungs from the stomach area.
Vocal Production & Articulation
Articulation The art of Being Understood. Every letter is important! OOOOn the weekends I like to catch a bus and go out on the town.  On the weekends.
Unit Two The Organs of speech
Chapter 3 Stage & School Textbook
Whip Around  What 3 adjectives best describe you?  Think about this question and be prepared to share aloud with the class.
VOICE & VOCAL ANATOMY Theatre Arts Unit 3 Mr. Walker.
Chapter 3: The Speech Process
Linguistics: Phonetics
Part I: Four Stages to Voice Production Part II: Vocal Controls
Voice and Speech Drama 1 Ms. Ayoub.
The Human Voice. 1. The vocal organs
Breath, Voice, and Diction
The Respiratory System
Vowels and Consonant Serikova Aigerim.
Speaking Our ability to form sounds and to use them to communicate abstract ideas and feelings! To produce speech, the lungs, mouth, and throat and other.
Chapter 3: The Speech Process
Essentials of English Phonetics
The Human Voice. 1. The vocal organs
Vocal Presentation By Laura Shelley Becky Winship Tonia Tolley.
Voice Why is the voice of the actor important?
Speech Organs The process of producing speech
The Voice The written word can be erased - not so with the spoken word. Author Unknown.
Copy the following Vocab words
The sound of a particular voice is called
A crucial instrument in your performance
The Vocal Process How the Voice Works.
S. M. Joshi College, Hadapsar, Pune-28.
Kuiper and Allan Chapter 4.2.2
Voice & Diction.
Voice Process English 10.
Vocal Production Vocabulary #1.
INTRODUCTION TO PHONETICS for III H.E.C.E., V Semester Students
Presentation transcript:

Understanding And Using your Voice To Advantage SPEECH MECHANICS Understanding And Using your Voice To Advantage

Idea, Respiration (Exhalation) Vibration (Phonation) Resonation (Cavities of Nose, Throat, mouth, Bones of chest and Head)

Properties of Speech Sounds Volume Pitch Quality Duration Degree of intensity tonal height of rate or speed at or loudness a sound object, from which the sound are high to low or low to high produced or articulated natural and distinctive tone of speech sounds , particular person yields a particular voice

Factors In Voice Control Breathing Contraction and expansion of diaphragm muscles Vibration Vocal cords tighten when we start to speak. The air then has to be forced through them. This forcing set the vocal cords vibrating. Phonation Converting the air pressure from the lungs into audible vibrations is called phonation.

Factors In Voice Control Resonance Resonance is the enrichment/amplification of sound. Cavities in our throat, nose, mouth, head and chest help amplify and enrich the sound produced by our vocal cords. These cavities are called resonance chambers. Articulation Human system stops, hinders or shapes the basic sound before it leaves the mouth into 44 distinct recognizable speech sounds called phonemes, for English. Articulation takes place. Lips, tongue, teeth, hard and soft palates are articulators.

Stages of Speech Development **Crying in response to any stimulus (unaware) **Between sixth and seventh week (aware of the sounds) **4th month (repetition of the sounds made by himself/herself) **9th or 10th month (imitation of others without comprehension **12th-18th month (intentional use of sound patterns in meaningful ways)