Prepared speeches
Members work on openings, structure, timing, and delivery through planned speech projects.
Visit a local Toastmasters meeting in Tampines. Watch the flow, meet the members, and decide if this is the right room for your next speaking step.
Put the practical details immediately after the hero: date, time, venue, then one clear next step.
The format is simple enough for a first-time guest to follow, and structured enough for members to practise deliberately.
Members work on openings, structure, timing, and delivery through planned speech projects.
Every speaker hears what landed, what can be sharper, and one practical thing to try next.
Short prompts help you practise thinking aloud without needing to prepare a speech first.
Guests can follow the session without knowing every Toastmasters term. The roles, timing, and feedback are explained as the meeting moves.
Members deliver projects they have prepared, usually with a specific skill focus.
Speakers receive practical feedback on what worked, what to sharpen, and what to try next.
Short impromptu prompts help guests and members practise concise, confident answers.
The club is not a staged studio set. It is a real meeting room, with people listening closely, taking notes, and speaking one at a time.
“The first visit is allowed to be quiet. Just seeing the room can make the next step easier.”
A guest visit is a low-pressure way to understand the club before deciding whether to take part.
Use the form if you want someone from the club to follow up. Use WhatsApp if you prefer to ask a quick question first.
Keep the first visit simple: observe the flow, meet a few members, and decide whether the club feels right for you.
No. Many guests arrive because they are nervous speakers. The meeting format gives you small, repeatable practice steps.
No. You can simply observe. If you want, the Table Topics host may invite you to try a short answer.
Bring yourself, a notebook if you like, and any questions you want to ask the club organiser or members.