| Abstract | Although the class in advanced public speaking is a mainstay of communicationinstruction, little scholarship has addressed the nature of expertise in public speaking or
 the instructional techniques by which it is imparted. The present study conducted
 in-depth interviews with 23 active college teachers of advanced public speaking, inquiring
 specifically about their goals, curriculum, and classroom activities for the class and
 the ways in which these were distinguished from the basic speech class. Qualitative
 thematic analysis yielded six distinctive themes: (1) extensive speaking performance and
 individualized critique, (2) learning additional genres, (3) learning additional theory,
 (4) intensive study of models, (5) extensive self-analysis, and (6) sophisticated processes
 for analyzing speaking situations. Two broad pedagogical tensions, both with classical
 roots, attend these issues: (1) the tension between teaching theory and facilitating
 practice and (2) the tension between teaching forms of speaking and teaching rhetorical
 processes.
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