Tuesday, December 01, 2015

 

Every Cloud Has A Silver Lining - evaluation



What did I learn from this recording?
1 Print the title of your speech or event large as the start to the recording.
2 Make sure the back of your hair is combed neatly, especially after removing your hat or hood or coming in from the windy outdoors before being filmed.
3 Look in both directions, including at the camera, but equally all around, when being videod.


What did I learn from this evaluation?
Maybe the title, opening line and punch line are the same, and could be shown on a banner or, in a small room to a small audience, a poster or A4 poster. Even a screen on an iPad.

In this video despite telling the evaluator to look for transitions, showing I was aware I needed them, I still had not made sufficient transitions. I had three stories. So I need a minimum of two, and a maximum of four transitions.

The first transition is from the introduction to the first story. (Unless you count the introduction as the first transition). 

The transition could be simple.,'So now I shall tell you my first story, a personal story, about ...'. 

At this point I need a prop. A picture of my uncle? The headline of the newspaper from the bombing in London. The years I used to put my three stories in chronological order:

2002 Death of my uncle.
 2005 London bombing.
2015 Paris bombing.

Then only two middle transitions, the first from story one to story two. 
The simplest transitions would be linking the times. For example, "three years later, after this personal event, affecting only a dozen people in any family, I recall an event affecting everybody in London."

The third transition: .

The final transition to the conclusion: "What can we learn from these three stories. "

"Two events are a coincidence, a similarity. Three similar events are a pattern. In my life, in your life, in everybody's life."
Please also see my posts on Speaking, Travel and Recycling. Follow me on Facebook or link to me on LinkedIn.

Angela Lansbury, writer, photographer, author, speaker.
Author of Wedding Speeches and Toasts; Quick Quotations. (See Lulu.com and Amazon) 

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Tuesday, August 18, 2015

 

My award-winning speech evaluation Aug 18 2015 of Thulassi's speech on diabetes

Thulassi has such a soothing voice I could listen to her all evening, even if I couldn't understand a word she said - I just love listening to her! I can see you and everybody smiling and nodding because you agree with me. Don't you? Yes!

Her subject, diabetes, is both technical and scientific and personal. I was interested because my late father had diabetes, so I might develop it. I wondered how many other people in the room were as interested as I was.

I thought she could have started by finding out, asking, 'how many people have a family member who has diabetes, or a friend or neighbour or colleague?'

Even if only one hand goes up, that proves, and she could say, everybody in the room knows somebody who is affected - the person who put up their hand.

I'd like to know and hear from her a statistic or generalisation. I received through the post this morning a leaflet from he Diabetes UK Society, saying that the numbers of people affected in the UK have doubled.

Doubled compared with what?  I can't remember. You have to be careful with half-remembered dramatic statistics. Doubled since when? The statistician in my family asks me, compared to what? This month versus last month, this month compared to the same month last year, this year versus last year, this year compared with ten years ago.

Her project was practising using slides. Her slides well researched. Very technical.

I suggest she needs to add a slide with the glossary of technical terms used. I didn't understand ........... (several technical terms and acronyms).

I'd always worried what went into drugs. She answered my worst fears. Insulin drugs used to be made with bits of pigs. However, now production is safer. You could also see the production workers'  safety masks.

The slide I liked most was the men in masks making insulin. She used the positive word safety. Reassuring.

To sum up, great delivery, of a subject which affects many of us - show us how many of us. Several great slides, just add one with a glossary.

Then you'll have perfected a well-delivered, well-researched, reassuring speech about how we can trust scientific advances to improve the lives of those in our community.

Her summary was good. Announce you are summarising. I could see when she started summarising everyone was sitting with their hands raised. Make sure, as you near the end, everyone's ready, prepared to applaud you.

One final tip, for your last line, your punchline, slow down, pause, emphatically, pick out one word in your sentence which is vital and make that word loud and clear. Put the most important word at the end of your last sentence, as I am now, so that people know, this is - the - end! Thalami, great speech!

(I smiled and nodded towards her and applauded, pausing, as the audience continued clapping) to shake the hand of the Toastmaster of the evening (TME).

Meetings Dates
Evaluation given at Harrovians Speakers' Club, meeting Stanmore at Glebe Hall, Glebe Road, usually on the first, third and fifth Mondays, except when a bank holiday changes the schedule. See website for details. Websites exist for individual clubs and Toastmasters International Find a club. Speakers' clubs are in more than a hundred countries worldwide, in many cities of the USA where the organisation started nearly a hundred years ago in 1924, as well as Europe and Asia and many parts of the world. If you don't have a club in your country, social group, community centre or workplace, you can ask Toastmasters International for help. If there's an experienced toastmaster in your country, they can get free starter kits for about 20 members to help you launch a new club.

Next month, September, is the time of the Toastmasters' International autumn contests, Humorous Speech Contest and Table Topics Contests. These contests are open to the public, occasionally free to contestants, often free to guests if held in a local community centre, sometimes a charge to members and guests because of the cost of hiring a large venue and catering.

Angela Lansbury B A Honours, past president of Harrovians' Speakers' Club,
author of:
Quick Quotations for speakers and writers;
Who Said What When (quotations for speeches every day of the year, featuring birthdays, famous last words, presidential speeches, anniversaries and events).















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