Is Public Speaking Really More Feared Than Death?: Communication Research Reports April 2012
Is Public Speaking Really More Feared Than Death?: Communication Research Reports April 2012
Is Public Speaking Really More Feared Than Death?: Communication Research Reports April 2012
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To cite this article: Karen Kangas Dwyer & Marlina M. Davidson (2012): Is Public Speaking Really More
Feared Than Death?, Communication Research Reports, 29:2, 99-107
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Communication Research Reports
Vol. 29, No. 2, April–June 2012, pp. 99–107
The purpose of this study was to investigate the genesis of the 1973 R. H. Bruskin
Associate’s American Fears study appearing in the London Sunday Times and often
reported in communication textbooks as ‘‘people fear public speaking more than death,’’
and to replicate the study among college students who read the textbooks. Participants in a
multi-section communication course (N ¼ 815) completed the survey during the first week
of class by selecting their fears from a list of fears, ranking their top fears, and completing
the 6 public speaking context items of the Personal Report of Communication Apprehen-
sion–24 items. This study found that public speaking was selected more often as a common
fear than any other fear, including death. However, when students were asked to select a
top fear, students selected death most often. These findings help authors and instructors
aptly quote the 1973 Bruskin Associate’s findings, which were confirmed by this study.
Keywords: Bruskin Study; Common Fear; Fears Study; Public Speaking Anxiety (PSA);
Social Phobia
On October 7, 1973, the London Sunday Times reported that the largest number of
Americans, 41% of those surveyed by a team of market researchers (see Watson,
1973) listed speaking before a group as their greatest fear. The brief story written
by Peter Watson, entitled ‘‘What People Usually Fear,’’ has been recurrently quoted
in numerous public speaking textbooks and by numerous speech teachers, authors,
and consultants, leading many to believe that people fear giving a speech more
than death. At least that is the way some communicate it. The following question
Karen Kangas Dwyer (PhD, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, 1995) is a Professor in the School of Communi-
cation at the University of Nebraska–Omaha. Marlina M. Davidson (MA, University of Nebraska at Omaha,
2005) is a Lecturer in the School of Communication at the University of Nebraska–Omaha. Correspondence:
Karen Kangas Dwyer, School of Communication, University of Nebraska–Omaha, 6001 Dodge St., Arts and
Sciences Hall 140, Omaha, NE 68182; E-mail: [email protected]
ate’s fears study (What are Americans Afraid Of?, 1973), despite how often the list of
14 fears, with public speaking as the top fear, has been rightly or wrongly referenced,
again and again, especially in communication classrooms. The purpose of this study
was to investigate the genesis and findings of the 1973 R. H. Bruskin Associate’s fears
study and query if, almost 40 years later, the results could be replicated among college
students who would hear about the Bruskin findings in their communication class-
rooms or read about it in their textbooks.
Literature Review
The fear of public speaking (i.e., speaking before a group) is a specific,
communication-based anxiety in which individuals experience physiological arousal,
negative cognitions, or behavioral responses to real or anticipated presentations (Daly,
McCroskey, Ayres, Hopf, Sonandre, & Wongprasert, 2009). Public speaking anxiety
(PSA) has been highly researched, often focusing on the causes, the correlations with
other factors, and the treatments to help those who are anxious overcome their speech
anxiety (e.g., Behnke & Sawyer, 1999; Bodie, 2010; Dwyer, 2000; Finn, Sawyer, &
Schrodt, 2009). High PSA has been associated with poor speech preparation,
poor speech decision-making, and negative affect and effect in performance (Daly
et al., 2009).
PSA—classified as a social anxiety: ‘‘the threat of unsatisfactory evaluations from
audiences’’—can become a phobia with devastating effects or, at least, lead to the
avoidance of any public speaking situation (Schlenker & Leary, 1982, p. 646). Phobias
are different from fears in relation to intensity and importance in a person’s life, and
some social phobias, such as the fear of public speaking, have become common in the
United States (Doctor, Kahn, & Adamec, 2008).
Public speaking is considered one of the four well-researched contexts that contrib-
ute to overall communication apprehension—the others include dyads, meetings, and
groups (Richmond & McCroskey, 1998). From studies focused on communication
apprehension, Richmond and McCroskey estimated that approximately ‘‘70% of
the general public’’ reports PSA (p. 43).
Communication Research Reports 101
In 1973, the R. H. Bruskin Associate’s fears study (What are Americans Afraid Of?,
1973) queried the prevalence of common fears and reported the results in their
monthly Bruskin Report. The findings of the survey were reported in Spectra (Speech
Communication Association, 1973):
R. H. Bruskin Associates carried out a survey in April of 1973 involving 2,543 men
and women adults. Respondents were asked to pick items from a list representing
situations in which they had some degree of fear. The rank order of fears reported
is as follows: Speaking before a group, 40.6%; Heights, 32.0%; Insects and Bugs,
22.0%; Financial problems, 22.0; Deep water, 21.5%; Sickness, 18.8%; Death,
18.7%; Flying, 18.3%: Loneliness, 13.6%; Dogs, 11.2%; Driving or riding in a car,
8.8%; Darkness, 7.9%; Elevators, 7.6%; Escalators, 4.8%. (p. 4)
Spectra added a final paragraph about ‘‘speaking before a group’’ from the R. H.
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About 40% of women have this fear, while 36% of men indicate some concern.
There is little difference by age, but people in the $15,000 þ income group seem
somewhat less concerned about public speaking. The more education a person
has, the less likely he is to fear addressing a group. People living in the southern part
of the United States seem to have the greatest fear, while those in the northeast seem
less concerned. For information, write R. H. Bruskin Associates, 303 George Street,
New Brunswick, NJ. 08903. (Speech Communication Association, 1973, p. 4)
as the top fear because that question was never asked. Although later publications that
cited the Bruskin study made it sound as though death was ranked second, this was
not the case. In this study, we sought to discover if these results could be found among
college students who still read and hear that public speaking is more feared than death,
and to ask the question that was never asked: ‘‘What is the top fear?’’ Thus, based on
the 1973 Bruskin fears study reported in Spectra (see Speech Communication Associ-
ation, 1973), we proposed the following research questions:
RQ1: Will students select speaking in front of a group among their common
fears more often than they select death, using the same 1973 R. H. Bruskin
Associate’s list of fears?
RQ2: When asked to rank fears, will students report public speaking as their top fear?
RQ3: Are there gender differences in the most selected common fear or the top ranked
fear?
RQ4: Is PSA related to the selection of the top fear (i.e., If a student reports higher
PSA, would public speaking tend to be ranked as the top fear?)?
Method
Participants
Participants in this study were 815 students enrolled at a large, Midwestern university
(372 [45.6%] were men, 416 [51.0%] were women, and 27 [3.3%] did not report their
genders), who chose to answer the fears survey questions. The participants were newly
enrolled in 39 sections of a basic communication course, which fulfills an oral com-
munication general education requirement. These participants were chosen because
they represent pre-public speaking students who would read in their college textbooks
that people fear public speaking more than death, and would not yet have completed a
college public speaking course, which might impact their fear of public speaking.
Respondents also represented a cross-section of class rankings, indicating the highest
level of education completed: 402 (49.3%) completed high school, 191 (23.4%) were
college freshmen, 110 (13.5%) were college sophomores, 61 (7.5%) were college
Communication Research Reports 103
juniors, 20 (2.5%) were college seniors, and 7 (1.0%) had a bachelor’s or graduate
degree.
reliability estimates in the range of .80 to .85, with demonstrated construct, concur-
rent, discriminant, and predictive validity (Bodie, 2010; Levine & McCroskey,
1990). The obtained reliability coefficient (Cronbach’s alpha) for this study was .88.
The data were collected as part of the general education oral communication
assessment. On the first day of a basic communication course during a Fall semester,
instructors (20 out of 22, representing 39 sections) assigned their students an online
assessment survey about communication. The three questions asking students to sel-
ect their fears from a list of fears were indicated on the survey as optional. Students
were assured that the survey would be tabulated by an outside person, who would
inform each instructor of the final results. One of the primary researchers collected
and tabulated the results, removing all identifiers.
Results
Responses related to RQ1 (asking if students will select speaking in front of a group
among their common fears more often than they select death), using the Statistical
Package for the Social Sciences–19 (SPSS–19; SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL) report summa-
ries, showed that participants selected speaking before a group more often than they
selected death—the same findings reported in the 1973 Bruskin study (see Speech
Communication Association, 1973). The percentage that selected ‘‘speaking before a
group’’ as a fear was over 20% higher than those who selected it in the 1973 study.
See Table 1 for the results and comparisons with the 1973 findings. Financial problems
came in second, compared to fourth in the Bruskin findings; death was ranked third in
this study, compared to seventh in the Bruskin findings; and loneliness came in fourth,
compared to ninth in the Bruskin findings. Insects and bugs came in sixth in our find-
ings, but third in the Bruskin study. Participants in our study chose a total of 2,978
common fears from the list provided, or an average of 3.65 fears per person. Parti-
cipants in the 1973 Bruskin study chose a total of 6,304 common fears, or an average
of 2.48 fears per person.
Responses to RQ2 (asking if students will report public speaking as one of their
top fears), using the SPSS–19 report summaries, showed that when students were
104 K. K. Dwyer & M. M. Davidson
Table 1 Responses to Research Question 1: Everybody Has Fears About Some Things
1973 Bruskin
2010 Findings Associate’s Findings
asked to rank their top three fears, 20.0% listed death as their top fear, 18.4% listed
speaking before a group as their top fear, and 15.0% listed financial problems as their
top fear (see the rankings in Table 2). Thus, death was ranked as the top fear among
college students, and students selected it as a top fear more often than they selected
public speaking.
Top Fearsa n % n % n %
Responses to RQ3 (asking if there are gender differences in the most selected
common fear or top ranked fear), using a chi-square analysis, showed that there
was a significant difference in gender regarding the most selected common fear,
v2(1, N ¼ 856) ¼ 9.24, p ¼ .002; women selected speaking before a group as a com-
mon fear more often than men did. When asked to select their top fear, a chi-square
analysis showed participants’ top fear also differed by gender, v2(1, N ¼ 788) ¼ 28.00,
p ¼ .008; 22.6% of women selected death as their top fear, and 19.4% of men selected
public speaking as their top fear. Gender had a moderating effect; a slightly higher
percentage of men selected speaking in front of a group as their top fear (see Table 2).
Responses to RQ4 (asking if PSA is related to the selection of top fears) were mea-
sured by first categorizing individuals as having high, moderate, or low PSA. Based on
national norms, high PSA was defined as a score >1 SD above the mean on the PRCA–
24 public speaking context score, moderate PSA was defined as a score within 1 SD of
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the mean, and low PSA was defined as a score 1 SD below the mean (Richmond &
McCroskey, 1998). Accordingly, for the PSA scores (M ¼ 19.40, SD ¼ 5.20; range ¼
6–30), using standard deviation criteria, 154 students were categorized as high PSAs
(M > 24.59), and of those 154, 44.7% reported speaking before a group as their top
fear (21.4% reported death, and 8.4% reported financial problems, which was tied
with loneliness); 551 were categorized as moderate PSAs (M > 14.19 and <24.60),
and of those 551, 20.1% reported death as their top fear (15.8% reported financial
problems, and 14.7% reported speaking before a group); and 100 were categorized
as low PSAs (M < 14.20), and of those 100, 24% reported financial problems as their
top fear (19% reported death, 14% reported heights, and only 2.9% reported speaking
before a group). Chi-square analysis confirmed that participants’ top fears did differ
by PSA group, v2(26, N ¼ 812) ¼ 121.10, p ¼ .000. Post hoc analysis determined where
the actual differences were. To correct for Type 1 error in the procedure, a Dunn–
Sidak procedure (Howell, 2010) was conducted to correct for possible compounded
error due to the three pairwise comparisons. The new calculated alpha value is
p ¼ .017. Based on the new alpha value, all pairwise comparisons were found to be stat-
istically significant, v2(3, N ¼ 812) ¼ 121.14, p ¼ .017. Thus, these findings showed
that those who reported high PSA also tended to report speaking before a group as
their top fear.
Discussion
This study investigated the genesis and findings for the original R. H. Bruskin Associ-
ate’s fears study appearing in the 1973 Spectra (see Speech Communication Associ-
ation, 1973) which has often been inaccurately communicated that Americans fear
public speaking more than they fear death; and to discover if, almost 40 years later,
the results could be replicated among college students who hear about the Bruskin
findings in their communication classrooms or read about it in their textbooks
(p. 9). In addition, this study investigated what students would select as their top fear,
gender differences in the most selected common fear or top ranked fear, and if PSA
was related to the reported top fear.
106 K. K. Dwyer & M. M. Davidson
The original 1973 R. H. Bruskin fears study was an omnibus survey conducted by
R. H. Bruskin Associate’s (B. Barr, personal communication, March 15, 2011), and
involved telephone representatives, who read from a list of 14 fears and asked parti-
cipants to indicate if the item was a fear. They did not ask participants to rank the
14 fears or select their top fear. The Bruskin study reported that speaking before a
group was the most selected fear, but it was not selected as the top fear because that
question was never asked. A fear of heights was the second most selected fear, and
death ended up as the seventh most selected common fear. Although later publications
that cited the Bruskin study made it sound as though death was ranked second, this
was not the case. Death was not even close as a most selected fear.
Based on the 1973 Bruskin survey fears list reported in Spectra (Speech Communi-
cation Association, 1973), our findings indicate speaking before a group is the fear
most selected and, thus, the most common fear. We further found that participants
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who reported a high PSA score tended to choose speaking before a group as their top
fear when asked to rank their top fear. When separated by gender, we found gender
had a moderating effect regarding participants’ most selected common fear and
reported top ranked fear.
Based on prior research, it has been estimated that at least 70% of people report a
fear of public speaking (Richmond & McCroskey, 1998); thus, our study supports the
findings that a large percentage of individuals—in this case, students—reported a fear
of public speaking. In this study, over 61% of students reported a fear of speaking in
front of a group, which is even higher than the Bruskin study’s report (see Speech
Communication Association, 1973), which found that 40.6% of an adult population
feared public speaking.
This study also found students selected many fears from a common fears list, with
financial problems, death, and loneliness as the top three most selected after public
speaking. The Bruskin adult sample (see Speech Communication Association, 1973)
reported speaking before a group, heights, insects, and financial problems as the top four
fears. The differences between the two studies could be related to students’ pre-career and
age-based fears. Unlike the 1973 Bruskin study, this study also asked the students to
choose their top fear from the common fears list, and they chose death as their top fear,
speaking before a group as their second fear, and financial problems as their third fear.
In conclusion, this study investigated the genesis of the often cited Bruskin fears study,
reported in the London Sunday Times (see Watson, 1973), Spectra (see Speech Com-
munication Association, 1973), and The Book of Lists (see Wallechinsky et al., 1977). This
study found that public speaking was selected by college students more often as a com-
mon fear than any other fear, including death, just as the 1973 Bruskin study found,
which was based on an adult population. When it comes to ranking top fears, students
selected death as a top fear most often, followed by public speaking, and then financial
problems. So, is public speaking the number one fear? The answer is ‘‘yes,’’ it is the most
common fear, selected by students more often than other fears. However, it is not the top
rated fear; death is. It is ranked among the top three things that students fear most.
References
Beebe, S. A., & Beebe, S. J. (2012). Public speaking: An audience-centered approach (8th ed.).
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