She had been teaching for over a decade and because of this information, she began changing her body language in each semester's first class. She stood at the door and greeted each student. She was stunned to discover that creating rapport with her students improved. Telling me that the connection and back-and-forth conversations with her students use to take several classes and now she felt their comfort and connection immediately and started having amazing discussions in the very first class of the semester.
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How Does A First Impression Effect A Teacher or Public Speaker? By Author, Speaker and Body Language Expert Patti Wood
She had been teaching for over a decade and because of this information, she began changing her body language in each semester's first class. She stood at the door and greeted each student. She was stunned to discover that creating rapport with her students improved. Telling me that the connection and back-and-forth conversations with her students use to take several classes and now she felt their comfort and connection immediately and started having amazing discussions in the very first class of the semester.
Are First Impressions Important in Job Interviews and How Quickly are They Formed? By Author and Body Language Expert Patti Wood, Job Interview Body Language
In a study conducted by Prof Tricia Prickett and colleagues at the University of Toledo, Ohio, the decision that trained interviewers made in a 20-minute interview looking at job experience and skills was predicted by random observers looking only at the first 20 seconds of the interview.
A study on first impressions in
interviews by Bryan Swider and colleagues at Scheller College of Business,
Georgia Institute of Technology, found that interviewees who made a good
initial impression on the interviewer(s) received better scores for the
questions they answered in the interview than those who made a poor first
impression. Research indicates that the first 20 seconds – the initial greeting
when you enter the room and walk across to your chair – in an interview could
be key in determining the outcome of the entire interview.
Qualifications
for the job, how you answer questions etc. are assessed after the first
impression in a live interview. The most qualified candidate who makes
the right first impression gets the offer.
What's The Difference Between A First Impression and a Stereotype? By Body Language Expert Patti Wood
First let’s define the difference between a first impression, which is based on potentially up to 10,000 cues in less than a minute of interaction with another person, and formed in the limbic system and therefore has a high degree of accuracy, ( 70 percent or higher ) and a stereotype which is based on past experiences, radical, ethnic, socioeconomic and other learned prejudicial information and formed in the neocortex and has a low degree of accuracy less than 30 percent.
A first impression is typically accessing credibility, likeability, attractiveness, and power. First impressions help us asses if someone is safe to approach. So, for example, Attractiveness may seem a stereotypical assessment, however facial and body symmetry and other cues such as shiny hair and clear skin can also indicate overall health so someone is safer to approach and genetically healthy, (approach because they would make healthy babies.)
First impressions happen very quickly. Harvard teaching fellows were videotaped and a 10-second silent piece of that video was shown to outside observers, who were asked to rate the teachers on a 15-item checklist of personality traits. Even when Ambady cut the video back to 5 seconds--even to 2 seconds--the ratings remained the same. All the important stuff happened, apparently, in the first 2 seconds.
Here's the scariest part: Ambady and Rosenthal discovered that a person's conclusions after watching that 2-second video clip of a teacher he has never met are very similar to the conclusions reached by classroom participants after an entire semester's exposure.
Trump's Body Language Going to His Indictment Hearing by Body Language Expert Patti Wood. Trump's Perp Walk Body Language
FORMER President Donald Trump looked like "a scared child reaching for help" ahead of an arraignment on Tuesday following his historic indictment, a body language expert has said.
The ex-president, 76, was seen boarding his jet to New York City this afternoon after he was indicted over an alleged hush money payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels, 44, last week.
In one photo where Trump appears to be waving from his car, Wood noticed that he was hunched over.
“That is a protective stance," she said.
"You hunch over to protect yourself from a hit.”
Wood referenced the fight or flight response, which can sometimes entail making yourself smaller or tightened as Trump appears to have done, according to Wood.
“The expression on his face … there’s not a smile. There’s not a playfulness," the body language pro said.
"The musculature is downward … around his eyes, it’s a mixture … it’s both fear and a little bit of anger. They’re combined together.
"Then, the hand is not his typical wave, not his typical thumbs up. It looks more like a child … to me that hand is reaching [for] help.”