Douglas M. Fraleigh is a Professor of Communication at California State University at Fresno. During his twenty-plus year teaching career, he as taught more than one thousand students in public speaking and related courses. He has also coached intercollegiate speech and debate at University of California at Berkeley, California State University at Sacramento, Cornell University, and California State University at Fresno, working with hundreds of student competitors and serving in regional and national collegiate forensics organizations. Along with his research focus on freedom of speech and the limits of legal expression, Dr. Fraleigh has served as associate editor for the
Freedom of Expression Annual,
Argumentation and Advocacy, and
Contemporary Argumentation and Debate.
Joseph S. Tuman is Professor of Speech and Communication Studies at San Francisco State University, where he has been honored with the Jacobus tenBroek Society Award for Excellence in Teaching. Dr. Tuman regularly appears on television as a political commentator and is the author of
Communicating Terror: The Rhetorical Dimensions of Terrorism. In addition. Professor Tuman has taught at the University of California at Berkeley, The New School, and the Sorbonne. He has published widely in the field of communication studies and has operated a private consulting practice for individuals, businesses, and government entities seeking assistance with speech writing, communication strategies, and presentation skills.
Peter Arkle is a professional illustrator who grew up in Scotland and received a B.A. in Illustration from St. Martin’s School of Art (1991) and an M.A. from the Royal College of Art (1993). Along with his work for corporate clients, Peter is a regular contributor to the
New York Times,
New York Magazine,
Print, and
Business Week and has created work for many other publications including
GQ,
The New Yorker, and
The Guardian (UK). He lectures several times a year at high schools and universities across the U.S. and notes that he’s learned a great deal from
Speak Up about preparing and delivering his own presentations. He has lived in New York’s East Village since 1995 and became a U.S. citizen on January 18th, 2008. To see more of Peter’s work, please visit
www.peterarkle.com.