24th August 2006

Acting as Timer

This week I wasn’t speaking but acting as timer.

This involved lighting 3 lights (green, amber and red) at appropriate intervals, to warn the speaker that time is up. It also means checking that all speakers are within time. You can’t vote for a speaker who has run over.

The most important point on the timing is that the speech starts when the person starts speaking - not when they take the stage. For most speeches in the Toastmasters programme, the timing is green at 5 minutes, amber at 6 and red at 7. The Icebreaker speech is an exception to this (with lights at 4, 5 and 6 minutes).

Table topics speeches have lights at 1 minute, 1 and a half and 2 minutes, as do evaluations

That said, some of the more advanced speeches do have longer times, and
speeches over 12 minutes have longer evalations too - but I was lucky
to have only standard times to deal with.

In each case, the speaker gets 30 seconds after the red light to finish up - after that, the speech will no longer be eligible for voting in the evening’s best speaker contest.

On the day, the hardest part was the club stopclock! It makes an audible beep when you start and stop the timer - which I was quite self conscious about. I didn’t want to distract the speaker with the loud peep. Steve put my mind at ease - they are used to hearing the peep when they start speaking.

This task can count as part of the Leadership programme, and Steve kindly evaluated my performance as timer for this.

So, I was preoccupied with this duty and there was no speaking for me, this week. However, at the end of the meeting, Mireia (our President) announced there was still a slot free for the 11th of September. My hand went up - so I’m now up to speak then. I’d better start preparing, hadn’t I?

posted in Learning to Speak | 2 Comments

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Its a personal account. Starting with my very first meetings at Maidenhead Speakers Club, it takes you through the highs and lows, the challenges and rewards as I try to learn from each new step.

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