Search the Toastmasters WebsiteSearch the Toastmasters WebsiteSubscribe to a Toastmasters Mailing List to keep up to dateFind a club in your area
Toastmasters New Zealand
Site Map  |  Print Page
Toastmasters New Zealand, Making effective communication a worldwide reality
Toastmasters International, Making effective communication a worldwide reality

About Us
Benefits of Toastmasters
Join Toastmasters
Club Finder
Contact Us
Enquiry Form
Ask a Toastmaster
News
Events
Speaking Resources
Forms
Chairing Meetings
Timekeeper
Grammarian
Introductions
Table Topics
Evaluations
General Evaluations
Better Listening
Better Speaking
Handling Q&A Sessions
Presentations
Using Powerpoint
Wedding Toasts
2 Minute Tutorials
Performance Appraisals
Top 10 Lists
Newsletters
Memos
Power of Publicity
Magazine Index
Recommended Reading
Useful Links
Resources Downloads
Programmes
Clubs
Club Celebrations
Contests
Online Forms
Promotions
Leadership
Mailing Lists
District Supplies Catalogue
Photo Gallery
Talk It Up
The Target
Crumbs
Executive Members Only
Policies
Search Site


This page has articles by past Speech Evaluation Champions, resources for giving effective speech evaluations, and an evaluation vocabulary you can use in your speeches.

Template

Download and print a Personal Evaluation Checklist for ideas on what can be used in a speech evaluation.

All evaluations are completed in the Toastmaster Manual being used for the speech assignment.

Credits

Completion of a Speech Evaluation can be used for the Competent Leadership Award, Projects 1, 2, 3, and 8.


Kim ChamberlainA Step-by-Step Approach to Speech Evaluation
By Kim Chamberlain, 2002 District 72 Evaluation Champion
How can you give better evaluations?

Try this six-step approach. 


Step 1 - Understanding the Fundamentals of an Evaluation
There are two fundamentals to bear in mind when you are giving an evaluation.

Firstly, imagine the person you are evaluating has been asked to give the same speech again in the near future.

  • What can you say to help them do it better next time round?
  • What aspects worked well and should be kept, and what could be improved on?

And secondly, evaluations are given to help both the speaker and all other club members. By giving feedback, you are one of the 'teachers' for the meeting, and are helping members improve their speaking skills.

To support this, try to expand some of your commendations or recommendations into a mini-educational to get your point across to the whole audience.

Step 2 - Before the Speech
Discuss the speech with the speaker beforehand. You can start the evaluation process at this stage by finding out what they plan to work on, and offering advice.

Read the speech assignment and find out the manual goals, and the speaker's personal goals (if any).

Write these goals down on a sheet of paper (your Evaluation Sheet), which you will use at the meeting. Write them on a single piece of paper, one underneath the other.

Step 3 - During the Speech
You are looking to see if the speaker met their goals. If they did: why? if not: why not, and how can it be improved? Using your Evaluation Sheet, listen to the speech and write C for Commendation or R for Recommendation against the goals listed (you may not have time to cover them all), plus any notes or comments. At the end of the speech determine which Commendations and Recommendations would most help the speaker move on, and only concentrate on these in your feedback. Choose the most important and helpful issues to comment on.

Step 4 - Giving the Evaluation
Use the C-R-C Method

  • Give one or two Commendations
  • Then one or two Recommendations
  • Then a final Commendation 

An Evaluation Formula

  • An evaluation is a mini speech. It has an Opening, a Body and an Ending. The opening is an introduction to the evaluation, for example, setting the scene. The ending is a summary of the main points you have made, and the body is where you concentrate on the commendations and recommendations.
  • Commendations have 2 components: State an issue that went well, eg speech structure, explain why it worked.
  • Recommendations have 3 components: State an issue that could be improved on, eg use of notes Explain why it didn't work
    Make a suggestion for how it could be improved.

So written as a formula, this is what the evaluation will look like:

Opening

Introduction

Body

C = Issue  + Why  
 
R = Issue  + Why  + How   
 
C = Issue  + Why 

Ending

Summary


Step 5 - After the Speech
Fill in the manual. Give it back to the speaker!
Offer discussion with them for further feedback
 
Step 6 - On a Regular Basis
Build up a bank of suggestions you can use in evaluations. Make a list of issues that may arise in people's speeches, eg variety of voice, speech structure, use of notes, and write down suggestions for improvement. Keep adding to the list, so that as issues crop up in speeches you are already prepared.

And finally, remember that the better you become at evaluations, the more you learn what goes into making a good speech, and the more you learn how to improve your own speaking. 


10 steps to becoming an Evaluation Champion

1. Watch and learn from evaluating the top speakers (video tapes, audio tapes, in person).

2. Follow the CRC formula above to structure your speech:

    • Commendation - 2nd best
    • Commendation - 3rd best
    • Recommendation # 1
    • Recommendation # 2
    • Commendation - Best

3. Practise the timing and know what you can do within the timing allowed.

4. Think about what you are doing:

    • Understand the fundamentals of evaluations (see below for Resources)
    • Find ways to be better or different
    • Prepare every evaluation
    • Visualise winning

5. Learn from others

    • Read about evaluation
    • Ask others how they do it
    • Watch other people evaluating

6. Build a bank of Commendations and Recommendations.  Use unique ideas to explain what you mean.

7. Have confidence in yourself and a likeable approach to the audience.

8. Know the Contest Rules. Read the Judges Sheet and know the judging criteria (see below). Help the judges give you marks by signposting your speech.

9. Self-promotion:

    • write articles about evaluations
    • accept invitations to be a guest evaluator
    • give educationals about evaluation

10. If you have followed steps 1-9 above, you will deliver a well prepared, confident, focussed winning evaluation!

Judging criteria for Evaluation Contests

1. Analytical Quality (40 points) - clear, focussed

Analytical Quality refers to the effectiveness of the evaluation. Every evaluation should carefully analyse the strengths and weaknesses of the speaker's presentation. Were your comments clear and logical? Did you identify specific strengths and weaknesses of the presentation?

2. Recommendations (30 points) - positive, specific, helpful

Point out the strengths and weaknesses of the speech, and offer specific recommendations for improvement. Recommendations should be practical, helpful and positive, and they should enable the speaker to improve next time.

3. Technique (15 points) - sympathetic, sensitive, motivational

Technique refers to the manner in which you present your comments and recommendations. You should be sensitive to the feelings and needs of the speaker, yet inspire and encourage the speaker in his or her future speaking efforts.

4. Summation (15 points) - concise, encouraging

This is how you conclude the evaluation. You should briefly summarise your comments and suggestions, and be positive and encouraging.

Toastmaster Resources:

  • Catalogue 202 - Effective Evaluation - $8.00
  • Catalogue 292 - Evaluate to Motivate - $17.50
  • Catalogue 317 - Giving Effective Feedback - $20.00
  • Catalogue 251 - The Art of Effective Evaluation - $140 (available for FREE loan from District 72)

Toastmaster Magazine Articles:

November 2002

  • The Ease of Evaluations
  • The Collaborative Evaluation
  • Dealing with a Bad Evaluation
  • Build Your Skill

January 2005

  • When you are the Evaluator
  • Evaluating the Championship-Level Speaker
  • Evaluating the Novice Speaker
  • Want to Win an Evaluation Contest?

February 2007

  • 3 Points to Keep Your Evaluation On Target
  • Do you Dread Receiving an Evaluation?
  • If Only I'd Said ... Mastering the Art of Self-Evaluation
  • Learning to (almost) like Criticism
  • Challenging the Advanced Speaker

Download the Toastmaster Magazine Article Index for more Evaluation references

Download and print an Evaluation Template (Word, PDF format) developed by Wendy Betteridge, Spinnaker Toastmasters Club 7868, Division E Evaluation Champion 2004.


A new take on evaluations

Here's a different way of delivering an evaluation - in poetry.

George Mulligan from Pegasus Toastmasters delivered his general evaluation all in verse.

Download and read a rhyming General Evaluation.

Also check out Killer Evaluations from District 58 Resources and the Individual Speech Evaluation form.


At every Toastmasters meeting, a significant part of the meeting time is allocated to the evaluation team.  The evaluation team consists of a General Evaluator, one or more Speech Evaluators, a Table Topics Evaluator, and sometimes a Grammarian, Umm Counter, and Timer.

Evaluation has several objectives, including:

  • To give the speaker your honest reaction in a constructive manner.
  • To teach the evaluator to listen, clearly, precisely and attentively.
  • To give the evaluator an opportunity to practice delivering an oral evaluation.

When you are the evaluator

Before the meeting:

  • Read the speech project in the manual.  Become familiar with the objectives and goals.
  • Read the evaluation guide for the project.  This helps you listen and watch for specific areas of emphasis.
  • Talk to the speaker before the meeting to get an understanding of the speaker's goals and any specific areas for which the speaker wants feedback.

Before and During the speech

In your introduction of the speaker, give the project title (e.g., Speech 2: "Organise Your Speech" from the Communication and Leadership Manual) and read the project's objectives.

Listen to the speech. What strikes you? These can be either great things or not so great things. Look for things that are missing. Especially consider the project's goals.

Write useful comments in the speaker's manual for future reference. Use your notes when you give your oral evaluation.

Your evaluation

Be positive.  Tell the speaker what you thought went well, what you enjoyed.  Say "I liked the example used to support the first point.  I identify with the cat in that story."  or  "The speaker really nailed the closing.  I was motivated to act immediately on the suggestion to write to my councillor." Always conclude on a positive comment.

Be specific.  Rather than saying "The speaker had distracting hand gestures" say "When the speaker pounded on the lectern, it distracted me from the point he was trying to make because it was too loud."

Be constructive. Rather than saying "The speaker's voice is monotone" say "The speaker's voice has good volume.  I would like to see more variety in pacing and pitch to emphasize the different points of view presented."

Effective evaluations are an irreplaceable part of the Toastmasters educational mission.  The speaker, the evaluator, and your fellow Toastmasters all benefit from effective evaluations.

Adapted from Effective Speech Evaluation: Tips and Techniques for Giving Helpful Evaluations (Toastmasters International, 1996)

  • Download and print a Toastmasters Educational Evaluation form (Word, pdf format).


Stretch your evaluation vocabulary

Try substituting the words in bold for the examples given: 

great
able, absolute, aces, adept, admirable, adroit, bad, best, brutal, cold, complete, consummate, crack, downright, dynamite, egregious, exceptional, excellent, expert,  fantastic, fine, first-rate, heavy, marvelous, masterly, number one, out-and-out, perfect, positive, proficient, skilled, skillful, super dupa, surpassing, terrific, total, tough, transcendent, tremendous, unmitigated, unqualified, utter, wonderful

excellent
accomplished, admirable, attractive, capital, certified, champion, choice, choicest, desirable, distinctive, distinguished, estimable, exceptional, exemplary, exquisite, fine, finest, first, first-class, first-rate, high, incomparable, invaluable, magnificent, meritorious, notable, noted, outstanding, peerless, premium, priceless, prime, select, skillful, sterling, striking, superb, superior, superlative, superlative, supreme, tiptop, top-notch, transcendent, wonderful

good
acceptable, ace, admirable, agreeable, bad, bully, capital, choice, commendable, congenial, crack, deluxe, excellent, exceptional, favorable, first-class, first-rate, gnarly, gratifying, great, honorable, marvelous, nice, pleasing, pleasant, positive, precious, prime, reputable, satisfactory, satisfying, select, shipshape, sound, spanking, splendid, sterling, stupendous, super, superb, supereminent, superexcellent, superior, tip-top, valuable, welcome, wonderful, worthy

effective
able, active, adequate, capable, cogent, compelling, competent, convincing, direct, effectual, efficacious, efficient, emphatic, energetic, forceful, forcible, impressive, live, moving, operative, persuasive, play hardball, potent, powerful, powerhouse, practical, producing, productive, resultant, serviceable, serving, sound, striking, sufficient, telling, trenchant, useful, valid, virtuous, wicked, yielding

able
adept, adequate, adroit, alert, bright, capable, cleft, competent, cunning, dexterous, easy, effortless, endowed, equipped, facile, fitted, intelligent, knowing, powerful, ready, smart, strong, worthy, qualified

satisfactory
A-OK, adequate, all right, ample, average, cogent, comfortable, competent, cool, decent, enough, fair, fulfilling, gratifying, groovy, hunky-dory, passable, peachy, pleasing, satisfying, solid, sound, sufficient, suitable, tolerable, unexceptional, valid

brilliant
accomplished, acute, astute, brainy, bright, celebrated, clever, discerning, egghead, eminent, excellent, exceptional, expert, genius, gifted, glorious, illustrious, ingenious, intellectual, inventive, knowing, knowledgeable, magnificent, masterly, outstanding, penetrating, profound, quick, quick-witted, sharp, smart, splendid, superb, talented, whiz

improve
advance, ameliorate, amend, augment, better, boost, civilize, convalesce, correct, cultivate, develop, doctor up, edit, elevate, emend, enhance, gain ground, gain strength, grow better, help, increase, lift, look up, make strides, meliorate, mend, perk up, pick up, polish, progress, promote, purify, raise, rally, recover, rectify, recuperate, refine, reform, revamp, revise, shape up, sharpen, straighten out, take off, touch up, update, upgrade

bad
abominable, amiss, atrocious, awful, bad news, beastly, blah, bottom out, bummer, careless, cheap, cheesy, crappy, cruddy, crummy, defective, deficient, diddly, dissatisfactory, downer, dreadful, erroneous, fallacious, faulty, garbage, godawful, gross, grungy, icky, imperfect, inadequate, inadequate, incorrect, inferior, junky, lousy, not good, off, poor, raunchy, rough, sad, scuzzy, sleazeball, sleazy, slipshod, stinking, substandard, synthetic, the pits, unacceptable, unsatisfactory

poor
base, below par, common, contemptible, crude, diminutive, dwarfed, exiguous, faulty, feeble, humble, imperfect, inadequate, incomplete, inferior, insignificant, insufficient, lacking, low-grade, lowly, meager, mean, mediocre, miserable, modest, niggardly, ordinary, paltry, paltry, pitiable, pitiful, plain, reduced, rotten, scanty, second-rate, shabby, shoddy, skimpy, slight, sorry, sparse, subnormal, subpar, substandard, trifling, trivial, unsatisfactory, valueless, weak, worth

develop
actualize, advance, amplify, augment, beautify, broaden, build up, cultivate, deepen, dilate, elaborate, enlarge, enrich, evolve, exploit, extend, finish, heighten, improve, intensify, lengthen, magnify, materialize, perfect, polish, promote, realize, refine, spread, strengthen, stretch, unfold, widen, work out

elaborate
add detail, amplify, bedeck, clarify, comment, complicate, decorate, develop, devise, discuss, embellish, enhance, enlarge, evolve, expatiate, explain, expound, flesh out, garnish, interpret, ornament, particularize, polish, produce, refine, specify, work out

correct
alter, amend, better, change, clean up, cure, debug, do over, doctor, edit, fiddle with, fix up, go over, help, improve, launder, make over, make right, make right, mend, pay dues, pick up, polish, reclaim, reconstruct, rectify, redress, reform, regulate, remedy, remodel, reorganize, repair, retouch, review, revise, right, scrub, set right, set straight, shape up, shape up, straighten out, touch up, turn around, upgrade

change
accommodate, adapt, adjust, alter, alternate, commute, convert, diminish, diverge, diversify, evolve, fluctuate, make innovations, make over, merge, metamorphose, moderate, modify, modulate, mutate, naturalize, recondition, redo, reduce, reform, regenerate, remake, remodel, renovate, reorganize, replace, resolve, restyle, revolutionize, shape, shift, substitute, tamper with, temper, transfigure, transform, translate, transmute, transpose, turn, vacillate, vary, veer, warp

Taken from : Roget's Interactive Thesaurus, First Edition (v 1.0.0) Copyright - 2003 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. All rights reserved. (http://thesaurus.reference.com/)

See also Dave's Good Thesaurus

About Us | Benefits of Toastmasters | Join Toastmasters | Club Finder | Contact Us | Enquiry Form | Ask a Toastmaster | News
Events | Speaking Resources | Programmes | Clubs | Club Celebrations | Contests | Online Forms | Promotions
Leadership | Mailing Lists | District Supplies Catalogue | Photo Gallery | Talk It Up | The Target | Crumbs | Executive Members Only
Policies | Search Site