Friday, 18 January 2013

Toastmasters Public Speaking

Toastmasters Public Speaking
Toastmasters International (TI) is a nonprofit educational organization that operates clubs worldwide for the purpose of helping members improve their communication, public speaking and leadership skills. Through its thousands of member clubs, Toastmasters International offers a program of communication and leadership projects designed to help people learn the arts of speaking, listening, and thinking.
The organization grew out of a single club, Smedley Club Number 1, which would become the first Toastmasters club. It was founded by Ralph C. Smedley on October 22, 1924, at the YMCA in Santa Ana, California, United States. Toastmasters International was incorporated under California law on December 19, 1932. Throughout its history, Toastmasters has served over four million people, and today the organization serves over 260,000 members in 113 countries, through its over 12,800 member clubs.[1]
Toastmasters originally began [2] as a series of short-lived speaking clubs organized by Ralph C. Smedley during his tenure with the YMCA. In 1903,[2] as education director of the YMCA facility in Bloomington, Illinois,[2] he discovered there was a need for training in speech. As Smedley designed a club within the "Y" for speech training, he struggled for a name, until George Sutton, the general secretary, suggested calling it a Toastmasters club. The boys liked the name and the club was a success.
At each club meeting, there was a rotation of duties with members taking turns at presiding and speaking. Short speeches were evaluated by Ralph and the other older men, and the boys were invited to join in the evaluation to learn more. The club performed its intended purpose as leadership and speech improved in the other educational groups with which these young men were associated.
The club only lasted a year after Ralph Smedley moved to the YMCA at Rock Island, Illinois as General Secretary in 1910. He organized a Toastmasters Club at the Rock Island "Y" which soon reached a membership of 75. When Ralph Smedley left the Rock Island "Y", the Toastmasters Club there also soon perished.
After he spent over two years with an architect working on YMCA architecture he accepted the post of YMCA Secretary at San Jose, California in September 1919, and soon had a Toastmasters Club flourishing at his new YMCA. Again the club lasted only a short time after he moved to Santa Ana, California in 1922.

Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking 
Toastmasters Public Speaking

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