@article{oai:nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00004627, author = {矢野, 香}, journal = {長崎大学大学教育イノベーションセンター紀要, Journal of the Center for Educational Innovation Nagasaki University}, month = {Mar}, note = {The present study aimed at examining the effects of order for verbal and non-verbal trainings in order to receive higher presentation-performance ratings. The participants were 37 college students divided into two groups. The first group received a verbal-skill training followed by a nonverbal-skill training while the second group received the trainings in the reverse order. After the training session, presentations by the participants were video-taped for evaluation. The recordings were rated in terms of four aspects: Organization, Language, Delivery, and Central Message by the experts as well as the participants themselves. It was found that experts' evaluations of presentation skills in four aspects for both groups improved after the verbal and non-verbal trainings. There was no difference in improvement between the two groups. On the other hand, the self-evaluation score except for Facial Expression and Body Language under the categorization of Delivery improve even after the training session. The present results suggested that the order of verbal and non-verbal trainings had little effect on the amount of improvement in presentation skills., 長崎大学大学教育イノベーションセンター紀要, 6, pp.11-19; 2015}, pages = {11--19}, title = {プレゼンテーションスキル評価に及ぼすバーバルおよびノンバーバル訓練の訓練順の効果}, volume = {6}, year = {2015} }