Top Banner
The Art of Effective Evaluation by Sharon Dawson June 10, 2015 @SharonADawson linkedin.com/in/sharonadawson
24
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Art of Effective Evaluations

The Art of Effective Evaluation

by Sharon DawsonJune 10, 2015 @SharonADawsonlinkedin.com/in/sharonadawson

Page 2: Art of Effective Evaluations

Goals

• Learn how an evaluation is structured

• Watch examples of real Toastmaster evaluations

• Learn what phrasing to use

• Learn the sandwich approach

• Practice evaluating an Icebreaker Speech

Page 3: Art of Effective Evaluations

10 Behaviors of Effective Evaluator

• Show that you care

• Suit your evaluation to the speaker

• Learn the speaker’s objectives

• Listen actively

• Personalize your language

Page 4: Art of Effective Evaluations

10 Behaviors of Effective Evaluator

• Give positive reinforcement

• Help the speaker become motivated

• Evaluate the behavior – not the person

• Nourish self-esteem

• Show the speaker how to improve

Page 5: Art of Effective Evaluations

https://youtu.be/usDaF4K5pGE

Page 6: Art of Effective Evaluations

An Evaluation Is Not

• About you (the evaluator)

• A chance for you to ramble on about an unrelated topic

• A chance for you to comment on another speaker

• Harsh

• The Grammar Police

Page 7: Art of Effective Evaluations

An Evaluation Is Not

• One size fits all

• Only gushing praise

• Your (the evaluator) chance to use gimmicks, inane techniques

• Gushing over how pretty/handsome the speaker is

Page 8: Art of Effective Evaluations

Structure of an Evaluation

• Outline project goals

• Strengths

• Suggestions for improvement

• Summarize

Page 9: Art of Effective Evaluations

Tell me something I haven’t heard

• Don’t summarize what the speaker said

• Don’t include a lot of quotes from their speech

• Focus on how they said it and how it made you react

Page 10: Art of Effective Evaluations

How would you like to hear

• “I couldn’t hear you Carol from the back of the room, so I don’t know if you met your speech objectives. But thanks for speaking today I look forward to your next speech.”

• “Don't pace back and forth so much Jennifer, it is distracting to the audience.”

• “You didn’t convince me, so you failed this Persuasive Speech David.”

Page 11: Art of Effective Evaluations

How would you like to hear

• “I had a hard time hearing you in the back of the room, so perhaps you could speak a little louder next time Carol.”

• “I was a little distracted by your pacing Jennifer.”

• “The goal of your speech was to persuade us, but I didn’t feel persuaded to accept your viewpoint David.”

Page 12: Art of Effective Evaluations

Phrasing: Avoid “You” “Should” “Must” “Don’t”

• BAD: “You must let your hands relax when you speak."

• GOOD: “I’ve found over time and with practice that I was able to release my hands and let some natural gestures flow.”

• BAD: “Don't walk in front of the PowerPoint projector.”

• GOOD: “It’s helpful to stand to the righthand side of the projector so you can still see the slides and gesture to them but not block the presentation.”

Page 13: Art of Effective Evaluations

Phrasing: Include “I” “My” “Me” statements

• "I felt that my reaction would have been stronger if you had included a picture of your dog."

• "It seemed to me that you would have accomplished your purpose more easily had you limited your talk to three points.“

• “It appeared to me…”

• “A technique I have found useful is…”

Page 14: Art of Effective Evaluations

https://youtu.be/2MgMJVcloXQ

Page 15: Art of Effective Evaluations

Sandwich Evaluation

VS

Page 16: Art of Effective Evaluations

Sandwich Evaluation

• Positive

• Suggestion for improvement

• Positive

• Suggestion for improvement

• Positive

Page 17: Art of Effective Evaluations

Sandwich Evaluation Structure

• Introduce speech objectives

• Comments that are a mix of positive and suggestions for improvement

• Comments that are a mix of positive and suggestions for improvement

• Summary of 3 positives and 2 suggestions

Page 18: Art of Effective Evaluations

Sandwich Evaluation in Practice

• “I loved your clear speaking voice Ellen, and would enjoy some vocal variety added in the future. I could easily hear you from the back of the room.”

• “You've improved from your last speech John by hardly using your notes. Perhaps the next time you could set your notes down on the lectern instead of holding them in your hand. I noticed you made eye contact with each person in the room even with your occasional glances at your notes.”

Page 19: Art of Effective Evaluations

Sandwich Evaluation in Practice

• “Deb, your quote from Maya Angelou gave me chills. I felt a little more time to let the impact of that message sink in before you moved to your next point would have allowed us to reflect on it a bit more. I commend how you repeated that quote in your call to action at the end.”

Page 20: Art of Effective Evaluations

Make Your Own Sandwich

Page 21: Art of Effective Evaluations

Before the Evaluation

• What are speaker's personal goals for the speech

• Be aware of level of speaker (new member, halfway through CC, ACB, etc.)

• Read project

• Read evaluator’s guide for project

Page 22: Art of Effective Evaluations

Out of their control

• Avoid giving feedback on things over which the speaker has no control.

• If the speaker cannot do anything about a deficiency, don’t give negative feedback

• If it’s a logistical issue like with the room layout, mention to Sergeant At Arms but not during verbal evaluation to speaker

Page 23: Art of Effective Evaluations

https://youtu.be/CZTIrSxgqVM

Page 24: Art of Effective Evaluations

Summary

• Positive Reinforcement

• Evaluation is a mini-speech

• On topic with speaker’s objectives

• Make the speaker want to come back to the club and speak again