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- From: jfurr@acpub.duke.edu (Joel Furr DTM)
- Newsgroups: alt.org.toastmasters,rec.misc,misc.education,rec.answers,alt.answers,misc.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Toastmasters International FAQ part 1 of 5
- Followup-To: alt.org.toastmasters
- Date: 10 Apr 1994 19:54:54 GMT
- Organization: 'They' Investigation Committee
- Lines: 377
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.edu
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- Originator: jfurr@bio2.acpub.duke.edu
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu alt.org.toastmasters:329 rec.misc:677 misc.education:12653 rec.answers:4833 alt.answers:2393 misc.answers:533 news.answers:17884
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- Archive-name: toastmasters-faq/part1
- Alt-org-toastmasters-archive-name: faq/part1
-
- alt.org.toastmasters Frequently Asked Questions part 1 of 5:
- What is Toastmasters International?
-
- 1. What is Toastmasters?
-
- Toastmasters International is a non-profit educational
- corporation headquartered in Rancho Santa Margarita, Califor-
- nia. Its mission is to improve communication and leadership
- skills of its members and in general. Mainly, this works out
- to 'improving public speaking skills' but there is also a
- potent leadership and management aspect to the organization if
- you aspire to reach that level.
-
-
- 2. Is this just a group for people in the USA or for people who
- speak English?
-
- No. The organization includes approximately 180,000 members
- in 54 countries, including Australia, the Bahamas, Canada,
- Ireland, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, the Philip-
- pines, Singapore, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the
- United States of America.
-
- Toastmasters International publishes a complete set of
- materials in English and basic materials in French, Spanish,
- and Japanese. As translators make themselves available, more
- materials are translated.
-
- 3. How is Toastmasters organized?
-
- All Toastmasters members belong to one or more clubs. Clubs
- consist of at least eight members and may have forty or more.
- The recommended size for a club is twenty or more.
-
- Clubs exist in communities around the world, especially in
- North America, and it's a rare locality in the United States
- that doesn't have at least one Toastmasters club within thirty
- minutes' driving time. There are, at present, over 8,000
- clubs around the world, and most of them are in the United
- States.
-
- There are many sorts of clubs: community clubs, military
- clubs, company clubs, prison clubs, collegiate clubs, and so
- on. At this time, the majority of the *new* clubs being
- chartered are 'company clubs', i.e. clubs chartered at and
- meeting at businesses and organizations, in many cases open
- only to employees or members of those organizations. Never
- fear, however; there are thousands of community clubs already
- in existence as well.
-
- 4. Where can I find a club?
-
- If you'd like to visit a club meeting, simply telephone
- Toastmasters International World Headquarters at (714) 858-
- 8255 and ask for the locations of the clubs near you.
- Alternately, drop a postcard to TI WHQ, P.O. Box 9052, Mission
- Viejo CA 92690 and ask for the local clubs' listings. You may
- be VERY surprised by how many clubs there are in your area.
- Quite a few clubs don't get around to advertising in the
- newspaper.
-
- If you'd like to find a club via email, email drex@kaiwan.com
- and ask. Dan Rex is in charge of marketing and extension at
- Toastmasters International World Headquarters and can look the
- local clubs up for you off their computers, but he needs to know
- where you live and what type of club you're interested in:
- morning, noon, evening, etc. Don't delay! Ask now!
-
-
- 5. Do I have to ask permission before attending a meeting of a club
- in my area?
-
- Usually no.
-
- If you're visiting a community club, it might not be a bad
- idea to let them know you're coming so they can tell you any
- details like what time members arrive to eat and what time
- members who don't come to eat arrive, but community clubs are
- almost always open to all and they'll be delighted to have you
- come to the meeting.
-
- Clubs that meet at companies and organizations, on military
- bases, or in prisons are often, but not always, restricted to
- members or employees of the sponsoring body. These clubs are
- happy to have guests but you sometimes need to call ahead to
- get through security or to find out specifically where the
- club meets.
-
- Unlike some other organizations, where one must have a
- sponsoring member who _invites_ you to the meeting and
- introduces you to the group, Toastmasters welcomes all guests.
- If the club is open to membership from the community, you will
- usually be offered a membership application at the end of the
- meeting.
-
- 6. Is Toastmasters a social or drinking organization in some
- regard?
-
- The name "Toastmasters" is a holdover from the founding of the
- organization, when one of the main types of public speaking a
- member of society would engage in was after-dinner speaking,
- a.k.a. toastmastering. It is rare that formal drinking and
- toasts take place, and these are usually at major banquets or
- conferences.
-
- In general, though, you'll find two types of clubs: those that
- have a meal with their meetings and those that don't. Clubs
- that have a meal with their meeting may charge their members
- for the meals in advance and pay the restaurant in one lump
- sum or may have members order off the menu. Since breakfast
- and lunch clubs are popular with the business community, you
- can often kill two birds with one stone by joining Toastmas-
- ters: educating yourself and having a meal with business
- associates. You'll also find some clubs that get meeting
- space by having dinner before their meetings -- and half the
- members wait until dinner is over to arrive. There's infinite
- variety to it all. This is one good reason to call in
- advance.
-
- Many clubs do *not* have meals with their meetings, though.
- Quite a few clubs meet after dinnertime in a public meeting
- room at a bank or library or at a church, have their meeting,
- and go home.
-
- 7. What happens at a meeting?
-
- The format varies slightly from club to club, but the basics
- include:
- * the business meeting (usually very brief)
- * introduction of the Toastmaster of the Meeting, who
- presides over the program that day and explains the
- meeting as it goes along
- * prepared speeches from members (of which more below)
- * impromptu speeches from members (also known as Table
- Topics, of which more below)
- * oral evaluations of the prepared speeches (of which
- more below)
- * reports from other evaluation personnel, such as speech
- timer, grammarian, "ah" counter, wordmaster, and General
- Evaluator.
-
- Meetings last anywhere from one hour (especially at lunch or
- breakfast) to three hours (if the club meets infrequently or
- has long-winded speakers).
-
- 8. What's a "prepared speech?"
-
- When you join Toastmasters (see the "Membership" FAQ) you
- receive a basic speaking manual with ten speech projects.
- Each project calls on you to prepare a speech on a subject of
- your own choosing but using certain speaking principles. Each
- manual project lists the objectives for that speech and
- includes a written checklist for your evaluator to use when
- evaluating the speech. Thus, if you're scheduled to speak at
- a meeting, you generally pull out your manual a week or two in
- advance and put together a speech on whatever you like but
- paying attention to your goals and objectives for that speech.
- Then, when you go to the meeting, you hand your manual to your
- evaluator and that person makes written comments on the
- checklist while you speak. At the end of the meeting, that
- person (your evaluator) will rise to give oral commentary as
- well. The purpose of the extensive preparation and commentary
- is to show you what you're doing well, what you need to work
- on, and driving these lessons home so you're constantly
- improving.
-
- 9. What speech projects are there for me to work on?
-
- In the basic ("Communication and Leadership" manual), there
- are ten speech projects:
-
-
- 1. Icebreaker - 4 to 6 minutes - getting over nervousness by
- introducing yourself to the club.
- 2. Be In Earnest - 5 to 7 minutes - continue to get over
- nervousness by speaking about something you believe
- deeply in.
- 3. Organize Your Speech - 5 to 7 minutes - work on giving a
- well-organized speech.
- 4. Show What You Mean - 5 to 7 minutes - not a "Show and Tell"
- speech, this project calls on you to work with gestures
- and body language during your speech. Unfortunately,
- many members somehow confuse the issue and show up with
- a bag full of props that they use in a "Show and Tell"
- style speech. Don't do that.
- 5. Vocal Variety - 5 to 7 minutes - work on rate of delivery,
- volume, speed, pitch, emphasis, etc.
- 6. Work with Words - 5 to 7 minutes - work on proper word
- choice, avoiding jargon and generalizations, etc.
- 7. Apply Your Skills - 5 to 7 minutes - go back and practice
- everything you've learned up to this point.
- 8. Be Persuasive - 6 to 8 minutes - give a persuasive speech
- on a controversial issue.
- 9. Speak With Knowledge - 7 minutes, plus or minus 30 seconds
- - research an issue, write a speech, and then *read* that
- speech to the audience (as opposed to using notecards or
- notes or whatever you used for the previous eight
- speeches)... and have it well-rehearsed, so it doesn't
- run long or end too soon.
- 10. Inspire Your Audience - 8 to 10 minutes - The final speech
- in the manual calls on you to move and inspire your
- audience in a well-presented and well-prepared speech.
-
- As you can see, all ten projects above are wide-open for you
- to choose whatever topic you like. Even if you pick a
- controversial subject, most Toastmasters audiences will
- evaluate you on how well you presented your subject, not on
- whether they agreed with you or not.
-
- For further information about the speaking program, see the
- "Educational Advancement FAQ."
-
- 10. What is "Table Topics?"
-
- Table Topics is fun! It's also terrifying. Basically, it
- calls on you, the guest or member, to present a one to two
- minute impromptu speech on a subject not known to you until
- the moment you get up to speak! A member of the club assigned
- to be Topicsmaster will prepare a few impromptu topics and
- call on members (or guests, if they've given assent in advance
- to being called on) to stand up and speak on the topic.
- Topics might include current events (e.g. "What would you do
- about Haitian boat people if you were President?") or philoso-
- phy ("If you had no shoes and met a man who had no feet, how
- would you feel?") or the wacky ("Reach into this bag. Pull an
- item out. Tell us about it.").
-
- 11. What is Evaluation?
-
- The Evaluation program is the third of the three main parts to
- the meeting. All prepared speakers, as noted above, should
- have their speaking manuals with them and should have passed
- them on to the evaluators beforehand. During the speech, and
- after, each person's evaluator should make written notes and
- furthermore, plan what to say during the two to three minute
- oral evaluation. Evaluation is tough to do well because it
- requires an evaluator to do more than say "here's what you did
- wrong." A good evaluator will say "here's what you did
- _well_, and here's why doing that was good, and here are some
- things you might want to work on for your next speech, and
- here's how you might work on them." It's important to
- remember that the evaluator is just one point of view,
- although one that has focused in on your speech closely.
- Other members of the audience can and should give you written
- or spoken comments on aspects of your speech they feel
- important.
-
- 12. What's all this emphasis on time limits?
-
- As noted above, speeches have time limits, Table Topics have
- time limits (1-2 minutes, usually) and evaluations have time
- limits (2-3 minutes, usually). This is in order to drive home
- the point that a good speaker makes effective use of the time
- allotted and does not keep going and going and going until the
- audience is bored. In the real world, quite often there are
- practical limits on how long a meeting can or should go; by
- setting time limits on speeches and presentations, partici-
- pants learn brevity and time management and the club meeting
- itself can be expected to end on schedule.
-
- Time limits are rarely enforced to the letter. In only a few
- situations will you find yourself cut off if you go too long,
- and that's up to the individual club. Most clubs don't cut
- speakers off if they go overtime.
-
- It is common for clubs to use a set of timing lights to warn
- the speakers of the advance of time. All speeches and
- presentations have a time limit expressed as an interval, e.g.
- 5 to 7 minutes. A green light would be shown at 5 minutes,
- amber at 6, and red at 7. In Table Topics, the lights would
- go 1, 1.5, and 2 minutes respectively. When the green light
- comes on, you've at least spoken enough, though you need not
- finish right away, and when the yellow light comes on, you
- should begin wrapping up. If you're not done by the time the
- red light comes on, you should finish as soon as possible
- without mangling the ending of your speech.
-
- The only times you're actually *penalized* for going over or
- under time is in speaking competition; in speech contests (see
- the "Contests FAQ") you must remain within the interval or be
- disqualified.
-
- Some clubs hold an audience vote for "best speaker," "best
- topic speaker," and "best evaluator" during the meeting and
- it's a practice in some clubs to disqualify people who go over
- or under time from these meeting awards. Check with the
- particular club to see what they do.
-
- 13. Why all this structure to the meeting?
-
- If meetings sound complicated, we're sorry. Meetings general-
- ly are not complicated once you get used to the timing lights
- in the back and the different roles members of the group play.
- Since the average club is expected to have 20 or more members,
- you need a lot of roles for people to play in order to involve
- everyone. And, since meeting assignments vary from meeting to
- meeting, everyone gets practice doing everything over the
- course of several meetings. One meeting, you'll be assigned
- to give a speech; the next, you might be timer; the next, you
- might be the Toastmaster of the Meeting, running the whole
- show. It keeps you flexible and it keeps you from having to
- prepare a speech EVERY meeting, which would get old quickly.
-
- 14. I'm scared to death of speaking! Why should I look into
- Toastmasters?
-
- EVERYONE is afraid of speaking. In poll after poll, "public
- speaking" comes up as more feared than "death." Public
- speaking is the nation's #1 fear. You are no different. Even
- if you think you're really good at speaking, there will come
- times when your heart stops and your palms sweat and you
- freeze before an audience. Toastmasters can help with that.
-
- Remember that EVERYONE in a Toastmasters club is there because
- at some point they realized they needed help communicating and
- speaking before audiences. Almost everyone will remember how
- wretched they felt when they gave their first speech. You may
- be startled to find out how supportive a Toastmasters club
- really can be. [The author of this FAQ recruited a friend to
- Toastmasters who was so overwrought and nervous that she
- sobbed as if her heart was broken after her first speech.
- Ditto for the second. Some tears after the third. Eventually
- she realized that we weren't going to eat her alive and she
- came to enjoy it. By the time she earned her CTM, she
- consistently won "best speaker" votes at our meetings.]
-
- If you're aware how nervous you are but aren't convinced that
- you should do anything about it, stop and think what skill is
- more important than any other when it comes to getting and
- keeping a good job?
-
- Think you're already an excellent speaker? People who think
- they're really good sometimes come into Toastmasters and find
- out how unstructured and sloppy they really are. Being
- comfortable doesn't mean that you're actually GOOD. Even if
- you ARE good, you can always get better. Toastmasters can
- give you a lot of skills and keep good speakers improving.
-
- If you still don't know whether you'd like Toastmasters, why
- not visit a meeting? If you still don't think it's your cup
- of tea, we'll still be happy you came by.
-
- 15. How is Toastmasters more beneficial than other forms of
- speaking improvement?
-
- College and high school courses in public speaking usually
- involve the students sitting through dozens of lectures
- followed by one or two speaking opportunities. When the
- speeches are over, you get a grade. Often, you get graded on
- what you did wrong. This isn't a way to build reassurance and
- motivation. Then too, you rarely get much of a chance to
- practice by doing. You get up at the end of the semester,
- give your speech, and sit down. Toastmasters is constant
- reinforcement and constant improvement. You learn by doing,
- not by sitting there while someone lectures for hours.
-
- For-profit courses such as Dale Carnegie can be very good for
- their participants. They also cost a lot and when they're
- over, they're over. Toastmasters costs $36 per year (plus
- club dues, if any) and it can last a lifetime.
-
- 16. Where should I go for further information?
-
- See the Membership FAQ, the Educational Advancement FAQ, the
- Leadership and Organization FAQ, and the Miscellany FAQ. Ask
- questions in alt.org.toastmasters. Write the poster of this
- FAQ. Call Toastmasters International at 1-714-858-8255.
- Write Toastmasters International at P.O. Box 9052, Mission
- Viejo, California, 92690-7052.
-
- Toastmasters is a great organization! Check it out!
-
-
-
-