Callista wrote:
So I got my grades back for a presentation I did the other day. I did pretty well--a solid B--but apparently I lost quite a few points for "not making eye contact with the audience".
Thing is, I'm trying to translate statistics into English and explain them to a bunch of people, all while staying within my time limit and being understandable, using full sentences, etc. and I just do not have enough brain space left over to randomly stare at people's eyeballs. If I did that, I'd get distracted, start stuttering, lose words, lose track, and generally be horrible at communication. That's why I don't make eye contact to begin with.
Any way to convince the prof that making eye contact--during presentations or at any other time--is not the optimal choice for me?
Does the prof know you are AS? This would be the only way you could justify your presentation style.
The problem is that in real life presentations, this lack of eye contact diminishes the effectiveness. The eye contact builds a link to the audience and helps them trust the presenter. So the eye contact issue is a valid criticism. Sort of sucks, especially when the substance of the presentation is solid.
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