Reference no: EM131869442
Topic : Black History Month Keynote Speaker: Angela Davis
Wool Ballroom, Busch Student Center
Noted civil rights activist and scholar Angela Davis will be the keynote speaker for SLU's Black History Month celebrations.
Guide to follow
1. Is it the speaker's interaction with the audience?
2. is it the composition of the audience, or both?
3. The process of mapping, as he describes it, involves describing the relationship between the sociocultural behavior one observes and the physical environment.
4. a description of the activities being observed, detailing activities of interest.
5. describe activities in the order in which they occur;
• provide descriptions without inferring meaning;
• include relevant background information to situate the event;
• record the date, time, place, and name of researcher on each set of notes.
• What happened at the activity. Include sights, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile memories.
• How you felt during the activity.
• How people responded to you.
6. What is happening within the location
7. Ambience, atmosphere, environment
8. Physical characteristics of the setting
9. How you are feeling and how you think this might influence what you are observing and recording
10. What do we look for in observation?
• What is your role in the setting? Are you a background observer , an extra pair of hands, or a participant?
• Should you develop a set of notes away from the observation setting?
11. Some things to consider -Context:
• What does the site look like? Smell like? Feel like? How is it set up physically? Take note of this for richness of data
MY NOTE to give you an idea how this lecture was:
• SomeMain Point in this lecture
o It is about freedom
o Women right to vote
o justice
o education is very important, but it is not enough, and it is not the only subject we have to work on it
o How can America be Great and better
o Black history is the America history
o Freedom is constant struggle
• There was interaction and enthusiasm
• The audience was a good listener and stood for the speaker throughout the lecture
• The audience was integrated throughout the lecture. The room is quiet because everyone is attracted to the speaker. Do not find anyone who is busy with mobile phones or side conversations
• For example, in the Question-and-answer (Q&A) sessionmicrophone battery endedSuddenly and the audience shouting because they wanted to hear every word from the speaker
• There were two kinds of applause after the end of his poverty and warm applause when the speaker says eloquent affect the audience and has repeated this repeatedly
• An example when she said women's suffrage and was ratified on August 18, 1920 BUT African-American women were increasingly marginalized they cannot vote SO how women was suffrage. It would take the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 before most African Americans in the South were registered to vote.
• Description of the place
o The room was very large and very suitable for the attendance
o Where the attendance filled 80%
o The arrangement of chairs was harmonic. The direction of the chairs in Milan is at the far right and north of the hall toward the direction of the speaker
o The air was clean, fresh and suitable for the size of the room. When the air is moderate and proportional to the size of the room and attendance. This contributes to the focus
o 3 screens conveying a clear picture of the theater
o Chairs was good enough for two-hour seating
o Lighting ........
o The voice of the speaker was very clear and it was clear to us that she was seasoned to speak because she knew the good distance between a microphone and her mouth
o Also the speakers that transmit sound were of high quality because there was no resonance and the sound was pure and net