| Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen,
I would like to take you back to my secondary school days
in March 1962. I those days my school organised class contests
every year, both in various kinds of sports and in various
aspects of culture. One of the contests was called eloquence.
Of course, you can imagine that, then as well now, a 14-year-old
would not willingly make himself ridiculous by exposing himself
in a speech. Since everybody had to take part in a contest,
I was at a certain moment appointed "volunteer"
for the eloquence contest. My classmates in those days must
have been more aware of my hidden talents in the field of
speaking than I was.
Things in those days were a bit different from the way speaking
contests are organised nowadays. I was put in a classroom
on my own for 15 minutes with a number of titles scribbled
on a piece of paper. I had to speak for 5 minutes on one of
those topics. Fortunately, I did not finish last, but last
but one, which I thought was quite an achievement. After that
experience I said to myself: "No way, Jose. You're never
going to do something like that again." After a name
change and many internal therapeutic struggles I have come
to look at the whole thing of speaking differently.
I have been involved in speaking contests for over 10 years
now. My school hosted regional rounds in the past, I have
been a judge, chair of the day and, yes, as a teacher I have
also been involved in the speaking contests.
We hear a lot about teachers being very busy people, with
a heavy workload. That could mean that there is an easy way-out
for the teachers if they wish to do so. They will just have
to do the administrative nitty-gritty that goes with entering
a student for the competition. Apart from the fact that this
not seem to be very nice to the student, I must admit that
this attitude can be a great time-saver: you have more time
to wash your car, play a round of golf, or, as in my case,
finally do the work in the garden that your wife has been
asking you to do for ages.
The teachers with this attitude do not know what they are
missing. You can work on the ideas with your student and discover
what they have written. After all, students do have something
to say. Together you work on the ideas that the students has
put on paper. I very ofeten see myself as a sort of sparring
partner. When it comes to the actual practising of the speech,
I am always amazed at how quickly students peck up ideas,
hints and suggestions and further develop them in the speech.
A process like this makes you aware of role as a teacher or
guide, whichever you wish to call it.
When we get to the day of the speech, usually on a Saturday,
we don't get the chance to was the car, play our round of
golf or work in the garden. Of course, I am nervous, just
like my student is, because I want him or her to do well and
go on to the next round. If it goes well, there the joy of
winning. If it doesn't, there is, of course, the disappointment,
but that is very often only for a short moment.
There is also the feeling of being in this together, for
when I told my students this year that in their preliminary
round they had lost to speakers who had finally made it to
the final, their reaction was: "Oh, cool!"
When I look at the future of the BBC Speaking Awards, I can
say that the future is safe. I am also involved in the Junior
Speaking Contest Speak!Speak!!Speak!!! for students of the
second and third years of bilingual schools in the Netherlands,
and I can tell you: there is a lot of talent coming your way.
All these things lift me up and will do so as long as I am
involved with public speaking. I definitely will not stop
or, to quote the English writer Alan Sillitoe: "They
will have to drag me kicking and screaming because I want
to stay where I am."
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