| Extemporaneous
Speaker, National Champion, Milton Phenom |
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February 5, 2004
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Has the electoral system learned the lessons of Bush v. Gore? That’s
the question posed to Josh Bone during the final round of the Montgomery
Bell Academy Extemporaneous Round Robin Championship.
With the question in hand, the Milton Academy senior has 30 minutes
to research his topic and develop a seven-minute extemporaneous
speech.
Josh,
whose area of expertise is Southeast Asia takes his domestic topic
in stride and heads over to three, 60-pound Rubbermaid® tubs.
Filled with extensive files pulled from the likes of the Economist,
The New York Times and Foreign Affairs that Josh
and his fellow Milton extempers have collected and maintained throughout
the year, the contents of these tubs are the only materials available
to Josh for the next 30 minutes.
Josh was invited as one of the top 15 speakers in the country to
the Montgomery Bell event for the third year in a row. In nine preliminary
rounds, Josh received 24 first ranks and three second place ranks.
In the final round Josh broke a tournament record, beating the second
place competitor by more than 25 points (usually the winner of the
tournament wins by one or two points).
Extemporaneous speaking places a premium on eloquence and expertise
in analyzing current events. Students must cite a wide variety of
credible information on their chosen topic and be able to deliver
direct quotes from their sources or paraphrase key remarks.
The only part of his speeches Josh memorizes is the first line.
“It’s important to make a good first impression with
the judges. Memorizing your entire speech is the kiss of death”
explains Josh. “If you forget a line, it takes too long to
get back on track.”
Extemporaneous speeches are judged on a number of criteria in addition
to analysis of the question, including the effective use of sound
public speaking conventions such as clear transitions, the utilization
of effective language, communicative eye contact and good posture
and poise.
For the past four years, Josh has earned an impressive competitive
record. He finished second in the nation last summer at the National
Forensic League Nationals in Atlanta. This year Josh has won every
tournament; he has been ranked as the top extemporaneous speaker
in the nation the top overall speech competitor in the country.
“In my 15 years of coaching, I have not seen a student compete
at this level, says speech team coach Jenny Cook. “To draw
a comparison, if he was a basketball player they would be drafting
him into the NBA straight out of high school. Josh is simply a fine
competitor and a great kid. I doubt that there is any other school
or coach in the country that ever seen this kind of consistent success
with a high school competitor.”
In the 30 minutes Josh was given to prepare his speech he has researched
the topic, worked on a 3-point analysis, a summary conclusion and
a humorous introduction. With a deep breath Josh steps in front
of three judges and an audience of 500 to give his tournament winning
speech, “I imagine you all remember those happy days in Florida….”

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