That is because the fear of public speaking only is ranked #54 of 88 fears (and it has a fear score of only 2.081 – just above Slightly Afraid). Results from the 2019 Chapman Survey of American Fears finally were released on May 19, 2020 - before Memorial Day. Results from previous surveys had been released before Halloween. But a motivational speaker also had a press release on May 19, 2020 titled Michael Lehrke discusses how to overcome fear of public speaking including a claim that:
“However, one fear that reportedly towers above them all is
fear of public speaking or glossophobia.”
The latest Chapman survey was done between August 7 and 26
of 2019 on 1219 U.S. adults. Detailed results are reported in a .pdf file titled Methodology Report:
American Fears Survey. There also is an article in a .pdf
file by Sheyra Sheth titled America’s Top Fears 2019. As usual, there is a
complete list of all 88 fears ranked by the percentage for Very Afraid plus
Afraid. (It also is possible to use detailed results and calculate a Fear Score
on a scale from 1 to 4 where 1 = Not Afraid, 2 = Slightly Afraid, 3 = Afraid,
and 4 = Very Afraid). Some results are of particular interest during this time
of COVID-19. They are by rank, percent, and fear score:
Corrupt government officials #1, 77.2%, 3.170
People I love becoming seriously ill #3, 66.7%, 2.944
People I love dying #5, 62.9%, 2.853
Becoming seriously ill #16, 51.3%, 2.583
Pandemic or a major epidemic #31, 42.8%, 2.392
Heights #41, 36.2%, 2.220
Dying #44, 34.6%, 2.158
Sharks #47, 32.3%, 2.015
Public speaking #54, 31.2%, 2.081
Fear of corrupt government officials ranked first and was
far above public speaking. For public speaking the detailed results from 2019
were Very Afraid 12.8%, Afraid 18.4%, Slightly Afraid 32.9%, and Not Afraid 35.9%.
On May 2, 2020 I blogged about how it was not true that Are
sharks now the #1 fear in America? Is public speaking only #2? On May 7, 2020 I
also blogged about Tone deaf writing about fears of pandemic and public
speaking. In that post I discussed another claim - that fear of public speaking
was more terrifying than either sharks or heights.
Coaches often cite a Washington Post article about the 2014 Chapman
Survey – where public speaking was ranked first out of twelve fears. On
September 29, 2019 I had blogged about Stop playing – do serious digging before you
come up with an opening statement. I pointed out that the more recent surveys
had much different rankings.
The cartoon of a Cheerful Male Public Speaker was modified
from one at Wikimedia Commons.
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