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Guidelines for speakers

The organizers of this conference are providing professional interpretation to enable delegates of different languages and cultures to understand each other. The interpreters are your allies in conveying your message to the audience. You can help them by following these simple guidelines.

  • If you have a written text or notes for your speech, whether or not you intend following them closely, please hand them to the conference secretariat for distribution to the interpreters. Interpreters do not simply rely on words, they interpret the meaning and should therefore familiarize themselves with your subject and terminology. You are free to depart from your text or add to it as you go along. AIIC interpreters are bound by professional secrecy, and the content of your document will remain confidential at all times and will be returned to you on request.
  • If your paper is technical, please give the interpreters any terminology you may have or any background papers on the same subject in other languages. You may also ask the conference secretariat to organize a briefing with the interpreters. Meeting the speakers would be useful in order to clarify specific points which will help improve performance.
  • If you wish to show a film, slides or transparencies, please make sure that the interpreters receive the script or a copy of the transparencies. The booths are often situated far away from the screen and it would be helpful if the interpreters had copies of the projected text in front of them.
  • When reading from a script one tends to speed up which means that the audience will find it difficult to follow and, as a result, parts of your message will be lost. If you have not spoken at meetings with interpretation before, it may be advisable to pace your delivery beforehand. Ideally you should allow 3 minutes per page of 40 lines.
  • Before you speak, please make sure your microphone is switched on. Knocking the microphone or blowing into it as a test will merely be amplified in the interpreters' headphones and cause an unpleasant noise. To test the microphone just say a few words like "Good afternoon" or "Thank you Mr. Chairman".
  • Please do not speak too close to the microphone as this creates interference and avoid leaving your receiver set close to the microphone when you speak to prevent feed-back whistling. The technician will be able to advise you on this.
  • If you need to move away from your seat, i.e. to point at a slide or transparency projection, please use a neck or lapel microphone. Without a microphone the interpreters cannot hear you, however loud you speak.
  • If you are speaking from the rostrum or a lectern and want to reply to questions from the floor, please make sure you have a receiver set with you to follow the questions as they are interpreted.

Your Team of Interpreters




Message Board

  Idette
Date: 12 May 2001 16:22
Subject: very useful!

Viewed by a group of interested interpreters in DC, May 12, 2001

  Hans Kronheim   
Date: 6 Nov 2003 18:47
Subject: Guildelines for speakers usage

Hi, I work for a S.I. company out of D.C., and would like to have permission to print this, and be able to send it to clients/and-or link to this page, before meetings take place. Thanks!

  Michael H. Ballard Mrkt. Dplm.   
Date: 9 Aug 2004 17:02
Subject: Guidelines for Speakers

I would like permission to share this article with meeting planners I work with. Also to link to your site from my meeting planners information page (when my web site is launched later this year). Also could I offer this article as a download to meeting planner on my site?

Tahnk you for your response.

regards,


Michael Ballard
Toronto Canada

    Michael H. Ballard Resiliency for Life   
Date: 27 Jun 2005 01:24
Subject: Guidelines for Speakers

Has this article been updated?



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