Title: Judges Training District 4 Presented by Henry Miller DTM
1Judges TrainingDistrict 4 PresentedbyHenry
Miller DTM
2Contest Roles
- Chairman
- Contestants
- Timers
- Counters
- Toastmaster
- Chief Judge
- Judges
- Tiebreaker- Judge
- Sgt-At-Arms
3Required Contest Roles
- Contest chair, chief judge, at least 5 judges
- Tiebreaker judge, 3 ballot counters, 2 timers
- International Contest only, Division and District
levels at least 7 judges or equal representation
from each Area
4Contest Judges Obligation to
- Contestants
- Toastmasters International
- Audience
- Themselves
5Good Judges are
- Accurate
- Fair
- Trustworthy
- Knowledgeable
- Good Listeners
6JUDGES CODE OF ETHICS
- Be objective
- Ignore timing
- Use discretion in support of the spirit of the
contest
7JUDGES CODE OF ETHICS
- Support contest rules and judging standards by
word and deed - Refrain from publicly criticizing contestants or
the contest - Reveal scores and ranking only in accordance with
official policy
8JUDGES CODE OF ETHICS
- Consciously avoid bias of any kind in ranking
winners - Do not consider contestants club, area,
division, or district affiliation - Do not consider contestants age, sex, race,
creed, national origin, profession, or political
beliefs - Demonstrate utmost objectivity
9JUDGES CODE OF ETHICSTIMING
- Judges must not time the speeches
- Judges must not consider the possibility of
under-time or overtime when judging a
contestants speech.
10Barriers to Objectivity
- First or Last Speaker Is Best
- Lets Help the Underdog
- Halo Effect
- Reverse Halo
- Second or Third Time Around
11Barriers to Objectivity
- Give Someone Else a Chance
- Club Norms
- Prejudice, Personal Preference
- Unfamiliar Judging Forms
12Judging Techniques
- The Perfect Role Model
- Measure each speaker against your ideal. Assign
score based on how well the speaker compared. - The First Speaker Model
- Assign 1st speaker average score. Measure other
speakers or - from performance of 1st speaker - The Baseline Model
- Select base score, then select or values. Add
or subtract values based on performance against
each criteria. -
13JUDGES CHALLENGES
- Treat each speaker the same
- Avoid letting feelings influence your judging
- Resist giving speakers high marks for anything
other than good performance
14JUDGES CHALLENGES
- Downgrading in one category because of
performance in a different category - Ignore past successes or failures
- Ignore norms in your club
15ToastmastersInternationalINTERNATIONALSPEECH
CONTESTJudges Guideand Ballot
1190A - Speech Contest Judges Training Program
16ToastmastersInternationalTABLE TOPICSSPEECH
CONTESTJudges Guideand Ballot
1190A - Speech Contest Judges Training Program
17ToastmastersInternationalTALL TALESSPEECH
CONTESTJudges Guideand Ballot
1190A - Speech Contest Judges Training Program
18ToastmastersInternationalHUMOROUSSPEECH
CONTESTJudges Guideand Ballot
1190A - Speech Contest Judges Training Program
19ToastmastersInternationalEVALUATIONSPEECH
CONTESTJudges Guideand Ballot
1190A - Speech Contest Judges Training Program
20PROTESTS DISQUALIFICATIONS
- Protests can only be filed by judges and
contestants - Before a contestant can be disqualified on the
basis of originality, the contestant must be
given an opportunity to respond to the judges - A majority of judges must concur in the decision
21PROTESTS DISQUALIFICATIONS
- Quoted material must be so identified during the
speech presentation - The contest chairman can disqualify a contestant
on the basis of ineligibility - All decisions of the judges are final
22LOOSE-ENDS FOR CHIEF JUDGE
- All judges must sign in to keep track of ballots
- Request attendees to turn off cell phones
- Keep the identity of the tie-breaking and all
judges secret
23Judges Training