Are
you ‘Ready for an Emergency’, can opener too?
At Toastmaster meetings there are more roles on the agenda
than just speaking.
In fact there is more to
Toastmaster club meetings than just listening to a member speak.
Toastmasters is where many life benefits are learnt, for
example, improving confidence, learning to listen and reply effectively. All
these areas can be most useful in all parts of a member’s life and in particular
in the workplace.
Pania Club meets for 50 minutes between 12 and 1pm each
Thursday. Typically the main points are two speeches, two evaluations and a
Table Topic session. The latter session is where the Table Topic Master has a
theme, asks a related question and then nominates a member to give a spontaneous
reply to that question. This is a brilliant way of learning to speak ‘off the
cuff’ and can be a real asset when learnt to do properly.
Today Anna’s Table Topic theme was all about emergency kits.
She set the theme by having an emergency kit on hand and asked four questions.
Linda, Marc, Noel and Ian all replied to their question in an enthusiastic
manner. From this we discovered Linda can sleep through earthquakes, Marc can
learn lessons from earthquakes, an earthquake makes Noel’s life incredibly busy
and Ian’s has food cans for his earthquake but no can opener.
The Table Topic presenter and speakers were all evaluated by
David. An evaluation is where a member is appointed to critique in a positive
manner. Usually this is done by commending the best points and offering
recommendations for improvement. An example of recommending is, “I suggest you
move around less as it became distracting to me”. This is so much more positive
and more easily accepted by the speaker than when words like, “you shouldn’t
move around so much” are used.
David’s evaluation of Table Topics was hilarious. He praised
everyone, gave wonderful examples of how miss matched he believed the questions
and answers were. A most amusing end to the well presented session and he
claimed Linda had the best reply simply because she answered, “no” to the
question, “Do you have an emergency kit?” David believed everything else Linda
had to say was irrelevant as she told us all about sleeping through an
earthquake and tsunami warning.
Laurel was today’s first speaker and her speech was entitled,
“Why should I?” This gave the audience both motivation and understanding of the
importance of voting not just at general elections in our own country but to
send the club's voting preferences to the Toastmaster’s worldwide convention
being held in Vancouver at the end of this August. Laurel pointed out how
Toastmasters may have begun in America but the rest of the world now had
sufficient power to make change should they wish as the American Districts
number 58 and the rest of the world number 56, making a TOTAL number of
114.
Two important websites since
provided by Laurel are;
To look at the maps: https://www.toastmasters.org/resources/resource-library?t=Maps
Graeme was tasked with both introducing and evaluating
Laurel. Graeme evaluated in much the same way one would give a speech. His
evaluation had an opening, middle points and a summary plus he found both
positive commendations and recommendations. This was most helpful to Laurel as
she was presenting the speech for a second time later that day at another Club..
The second speaker was Patrick and he was speaking from
project 10 of the ‘Competent Communication’ manual. This is the first manual a
new member is presented with and each of the ten projects teach speaking and
presentation skills. Patrick has grown over the past year into a very competent
communicator and this certainly showed today. His speech was entitled, “Failure
is Not an Option.” The meaning of this became apparent as he spoke because he
intertwined both his and his wife’s sporting achievements into being a winner/
failure was not an option and then how his very bad motor cycle accident
shattered his legs thus failure became an option but did it really? The goal
setting Patrick made after his accident was very motivating, definitely to at
least one coach potato in the room.
Craig evaluated Patrick and began by saying how Patrick had
inspired him. All Craig’s comments had clear examples and he discussed what the
title meant to him personally. Craig also gave a CRC evaluation and a very clear
professional summary.
With two very motivational speeches, thorough evaluations and
amusing table topic session, the following awards were made.
Best speaker;
Patrick
Best evaluator;
Craig
Best Table Topics;
David
Today’s meeting was a great example of how fun and vibrant a
meeting can be. Barbara as Toastmaster of the day (chairperson) kept the meeting
flowing along very nicely and concluded on a very positive note. Well done
Barbara! She was assisted by the Timekeeper, Stephanie who gave a very competent report and the meeting was summarised by the General Evaluator, Helen, who gave feedback to the Evaluators and the Toastmaster.
Area Director to visit next week.
the Best Table Topic was actually Linda
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