SOME PLANNING IDEAS
AN ALL DAY TIMETABLE
Introductions 20 mins
Explaining the sheets 10 mins
Science 1 hour
Break 10 mins
Speaking Skills 1 hour
Lunch 1 hour
Emotions 1 hour
Practice in groups 30 mins
Break 10 mins
Finding and creating audiences 30 mins
Getting feedback 30 mins
Appraisal and end 10 mins
GENERAL COMMENTS
There’s a limit to what can be achieved. We found that it is best to recognise that the actual issues of climate change are large and complex and impossible to cover in a day. Best to point people to the factsheets and any other sources of information (and if possible send them to people ahead of time and tell them to read them).
However, what can be achieved is:
SCIENCE- BACKGROUND, IMPACTS, SOLUTIONS
SPEAKING SKILLS - By Jo Hamilton
We started working in pairs talking about the three aspects of a talk which we had enjoyed, and three we hadn’t. This was fed back to the rest of the group on the flipchart. This was followed in the same format talking through when you’ve done public speaking before, and your first thoughts on public speaking (on climate change). We then had somebody to a two minute presentation on the science of climate change, displaying the classic things to avoid when speaking, followed by a brainstorm on all the negative things which he did. This was followed by the same format but in a positive way. This was done as a whole group, and was fairly light hearted.
I talked through some speaking skills, which are in more detail on the corresponding handout
Body language · speak to people rather than at them · eye contact - very important · watch for nervous habits · smile and be friendly to the audience
Feeling confident · remember a time you spoke confidently - what were you thinking?, what was your voice like?, how was your posture? Try to stand like this and think of time you feel confident just before you start speaking to an audience. · You have every right to speak about this issue · dress appropriately to the audience and feel comfortable
Bridging the gap between yourself and the audience · What are your aims in giving the talk? · What are your audience’s aims in coming and listening? · You are the bridge - build a relationship, show a bit of yourself and make the common ground between you obvious. · Humour breaks down isolation · bad news overload can spur people in to action or numb them out - you decide the optimal amount of info which is appropriate to your audience · Ask questions out to the audience, and invite responses
Speaking · speak clearly, loud enough and slowly · ring the changes in the tone of your voice · leave pauses and thinking space
Organising the talk · time - plan accordingly · stick to a few points and do these well · lead people through the arguments, include everyone at different pitches · have some notes and practise your talk
Content · tailor the message to the audience - use metaphors, stories, recent / local events and news · which piece of information will motivate this particular audience? · Make room in the talk to say how you feel about the issues · break the talk up - maybe with a video
We then split randomly in to four groups, and practised talking about an aspect of climate change - either off the top of our heads or from the template talk sheet.
EMOTIONS — Cliff Jordan
(Paired listening each about 2 minutes each way/ Open Circle 15 minutes/ every other section 2 — 5 minutes)
SPEAKING PRACTICE — 30 minutes
Drawing from the ideas expressed in the previous session, in groups of 5, people have a few minutes preparation and then take it in turns to address the rest of the group on "why do I feel fighting climate change is so important to me".
FINDING AND CREATING AUDIENCES — Jo Hamilton
We brainstormed different types of events which we could talk at as a whole group, and talked about using local media to create more news about the event and climate change in general. The activists media guide by George Monbiot is a great resource to use when planning a media campaign of any sort.
We then looked at degrees of challenge in talking to different audiences, and people worked in pairs to come up with a first step audience, a ‘pushing the boat out’ / more challenging audience, and an ‘ocean sailing’ / most challenging audience.
With the more challenging audiences identified, we looked briefly at
Ways to get support involve planning and doing the talk with someone else; getting a contact you know in different areas, using the network from the day to take a first step. We suggested getting a friend to sit in the audience and make notes of how you did in the talk, so that you get constructive feedback every time.
A SHORTER SESSION
Really a full speaker training would be two day- one day is hardly enough.
For a short session, half a day, best to concentrate on just emotions and speaker skills.
For a really short session- say an hour or two. Either: