How to Give a Research Presentation
Revision as of 04:51, 13 February 2010 by 98.183.200.158 (talk)
Preparing for and organizing the talk
- Plan ahead - give yourself plenty of time to
- a) obtain feedback on different stages of slides preparation
- b) practice the talk several times
- c) enhance your slides in response to a) and b)
- Prepare a timeline to adjust to feedback on
- a) the talk outline
- b) slides content
- c) practice talks
- Each phase may take a few iterations, mostly if this is your first talk
- Getting started
- a) Define one or two key take home messages
- This helps you focus on what is important
- Your audience in general can only remember a couple of things
- It helps you provide structure
- b) Points to remember in preparing your talk
- Who is your audience? (experts in your area, other scientists, general public, etc)
- Time allowed for the talk
- c) Prepare an outline
- Introduction
- Opening Slide (title of talk, your name and affiliation, and maybe a key sentence or catchy picture featuring your research)
- Methods and Data
- How much do you want to share?
- Conclusions
- What is the take home message?
- Acknowledgments (funding source, assistance from colleagues)
- Introduction
- d) Share the above information with some who can provide expert, timely feedback
- a) Define one or two key take home messages
A good talk must tell a story.
- Provide a context- why is this important, why should the audience care!
- Start with the really big picture: is your research addressing a fundamental question with important implications? or an important engineering problem that will make systems more efficient? does it have social or economic impact?
- Define the question(s) that must be answered
- In view of the big picture you presented, and the current knowledge in the area, what is your contribution?
- Clearly state how exactly your results will advance the field
- Explain in simple terms how you will be able to determine that you have answered the question(s) as you have articulated them
- What kind of data you collected, and how their analysis allows you to answer the questions
- Present the current knowledge in the field as it relates to your work, and explain how your work fits in
- Clearly state what your contributions are in each slide, and include references on each slide if appropriate
- Present the data - What point do I want to make? How do the data support my previous slides and my conclusions?
- Use graphs, charts or pictures instead of tables as much as possible
- Each results slides
- Draw conclusions
- Provide context
Some people don’t like this but I like to present an outline slide to people get the big picture right up front.
Know your audience
- Having an understanding of what they know AND what they DON’T know
- Think about the first year students and make sure that when you use jargon or new concepts that you spend the time to explain them clearly
- Most of the audience is students and NOT faculty the talk should be geared towards EDUCATING the student and NOT impressing the faculty.
- If you don’t explain it assume they won’t understand it
What to Include and NOT Include
- DO NOT fall into the trap of filling time with loads of results
- The audience doesn’t care how much time you put into getting a result, they care how important it is
- Always indicate the significance of the results
- Always show how they fit together with the rest of the
Striking a Balance
- LESS is more-
- Most review talks are not comprehensive reviews but rather a selective review
- Most research talks should NOT be a comprehensive list of all experiments you do
- Your reading should be extremely comprehensive but when you put the talk together pick and choose carefully what you want to present
- Ask yourself if I leave this out will people still understand the talk- if yes then leave it out
- Applies to word, slides, etc
Basic Procedures
- Plan on using about 0.7 slides per minute of talk.
- As you get more experienced you can use more particularly if the slides are of relatively low information content
- 20-25% of time should introduction for those have never seen anything about the field
- Define terms-minimize abbreviations
- If you use abbreviations or reagents know what they are and how they work.
- Avoid jargon, group slang.
- If your talk has parts think about have several summary slides one for each part.
About slides
- First concentrate on content
- For each slide define the key take home message.
- Think about how one slide leads into the next slide
- Then concentrate on artistry; a beautiful presentation that says nothing is of little value.
- Make sure that color choices, fonts and graphics are readily readable from back of room
- Avoid gratuitous animation
- When possible minimize the information on a given slide.
- It is often better to use two slides with half as much information on each slide
Things to Remember When Delivering the Talk
- Talk to the audience.
- Think about looking at a single person in the eye as you talk.
- Make an effort to talk slowly, and clearly
- Hear each word
- Take a breadth
- Ask yourself if you are looking at the screen
- Keep the laser pointer fixed in space as much as possible
- When possible avoid shining it into the audience and blinding them!
- Incorporate a bit of humor (even feeble self deprecating humor)- Don’t be glib.
- Don’t be defensive about criticism