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- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
- From: jfurr@danger.com (Joel Furr DTM)
- Newsgroups: alt.org.toastmasters,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Toastmasters International FAQ part 2 of 5: Membership
- Supersedes: <toastmasters-faq/part2_892726928@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.org.toastmasters
- Date: 16 May 1998 12:14:42 GMT
- Organization: none
- Lines: 168
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.edu
- Expires: 13 Jun 1998 12:14:15 GMT
- Message-ID: <toastmasters-faq/part2_895320855@rtfm.mit.edu>
- References: <toastmasters-faq/part1_895320855@rtfm.mit.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu
- X-Last-Updated: 1997/03/15
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.org.toastmasters:8753 alt.answers:34136 news.answers:130218
-
- Archive-name: toastmasters-faq/part2
- Alt-org-toastmasters-archive-name: faq/part2
-
- alt.org.toastmasters Frequently Asked Questions part 2 of 5:
- Membership in Toastmasters International
-
- 1. How does one go about joining Toastmasters?
-
- First, of course, you must have found a club to join. If you
- have visited a club and found it to your liking, ask a member
- (preferably an officer, who is more likely to be able to help
- you) for an application form.
-
- According to the bylaws all Toastmasters clubs operate under,
- any new member of a club must be voted into membership by the
- club. In practice, this rarely happens. Instead, members are
- welcomed enthusiastically into the club as soon as a standard
- membership application ("Form 400") is turned in with a check
- for the appropriate dues.
-
- 2. How much does membership cost?
-
- Upon joining Toastmasters, you will find yourself paying three
- different fees. One is the standard $16.00 fee that every new
- member must pay in order to receive educational materials (see
- below). One is the standard International dues, $3.00 per
- month. One is your Club dues, if any.
-
- All Toastmasters clubs are billed in March and September for
- semi-annual dues for their members who wish to remain members
- for the next six months. If you join in between those
- periods, you submit a _pro-rated_ share of the dues.
-
- Clubs usually charge dues on top of the world dues. This is
- so they'll have money in the treasury for expenses. It's up
- to each club what they want to charge. Some clubs waive the
- club dues for new members and only assess them at the semi-
- annual dues payment dates.
-
- So, to make a long story short, if you join at the following
- times, you'd owe:
-
- April or October: $16.00 + $18.00 + club dues
- May or November: $16.00 + $15.00 + club dues
- June or December $16.00 + $12.00 + club dues
- July or January $16.00 + $9.00 + club dues
- August or February $16.00 + $6.00 + club dues
- September or March $16.00 + $3.00 + club dues
-
- Then, once you're signed up, dues of $18.00 are assessed every
- six months, in September and March.
-
- * Note: due to California law, members of _California_ clubs
- pay sales tax on their new member fee.
-
- 3. Can I belong to more than one club?
-
- Yes. This is called "dual membership" even if you belong to more
- than two clubs. When you join the second club, of course, you don't
- need to pay the New Member fee because you don't need a second set of
- starter materials (see below).
-
- 4. If I belong to more than one club, do I have to pay full dues for each?
-
- Yes. If you belong to more than one club, you must nonetheless pay full
- dues for each club.
-
- 5. Are my dues tax deductible?
-
- In the United States, they are -- IF your job is of a sort
- that requires or necessitates good communications skills. In
- other words, it must be an educational expense to be tax
- deductible. Toastmasters International will send you complete
- tax deduction explanations if you request them to do so.
-
- 6. What do I get for my dues?
-
- Your $18.00 semi-annual dues paid to World Headquarters goes
- partly for a subscription to the _Toastmaster_ magazine
- (which, to be honest, is an excellent magazine), partly to
- support development of new educational programs (they've got
- some *nice* new programs coming out these days), partly to
- support operations at World Headquarters (i.e. the staff who
- process membership applications, CTM applications, new club
- applications, etc. etc. ad nauseam), and partly to support
- your local District organization.
-
- Furthermore, when you finish your CTM, you get three of the
- Advanced project manuals for no extra charge to work toward
- your ATM with.
-
- Dues went up for the first time in over ten years last year
- and as a result, dues should not rise for a long time (it was
- like pulling teeth to get the most recent dues raise through,
- and some members remain unconvinced that it was necessary).
- This raise had a lot to do with printing costs and so forth
- quintupling over the last decade.
-
- Your club dues generally go to pay for the club's supplies,
- such as ballots, awards, ribbons, and educational materials.
- In some cases, such as when your club has a meal at each
- meeting, your dues may go to pay for that.
-
- 7. What do I get for my New Member fee?
-
- Your $16.00 New Member fee gets you the following:
- * the Communication and Leadership project manual
- * the "Gestures - Your Body Speaks" manual
- * the "A Speaker's Guide to Evaluation" manual
- * the Voice manual
-
- The latter three are instructional manuals rather than project
- manuals. Only the first is a workbook.
-
- 8. If I want to drop out of Toastmasters after joining, what do I
- do?
-
- Simply wait for March or September to arrive and don't pay
- your dues again.
-
- It'd probably be a good idea to let your Vice President
- Education know to stop scheduling you for speeches, though.
-
- 9. How receptive are clubs to new members?
-
- Since most people are genuinely terrified of public speaking,
- Toastmasters has its hands full recruiting members. There's
- virtually no chance that you won't be enthusiastically
- welcomed into any club you join and immediately be considered
- one of the gang.
-
- Occasionally, however, people get into bad situations, but the
- same is true of ANY organization. There are jerks everywhere.
- Toastmasters probably has its share. For this reason, the
- author of this FAQ considers it a good idea to visit ALL
- Toastmasters clubs in your area before deciding which one you
- want to join.
-
- If a club that you visit turns out to be full of jerks, please
- don't assume that this is true of the entire organization.
- Once in a while, people come to forget that they're part of a
- larger organization and act as though the message and mission
- of Toastmasters doesn't concern them. Please nod, leave, and
- visit some other club. This is definitely the exception, but
- we cannot honestly say that it never happens.
-
- 10. If I join, will they make me speak right away?
-
- No. You will not be asked to speak unless you're ready to.
- If you feel more comfortable waiting a few months, that's fine.
- Most clubs attempt to arrange the meeting schedules in such
- a way that most members are involved in some capacity at each
- meeting, so you'll need to let them know what your wishes are.
-
-
-
- Give Toastmasters a try! If you want information about clubs in your
- area, do one of the following:
-
- * call (714) 858-8255 and ask
- * send a postcard to TI, P.O. Box 9052, Mission Viejo, CA 92690
- * access http://www.toastmasters.org/index.html
- * send email to tminfo@toastmasters.org (include a postal address)
-
- We're looking forward to seeing you!
-
-
-
-