Presentations : some advise how to do
Your talk should last a specified
time, with questions and discussion to follow this.
Keep in mind that your your presentation is usually scheduled after the corresponding lecture. In any presentation it is important to emphasize your analysis and conclusions. Do not forget to mention references
One member of a group can make
the whole presentation, although it might be much better if two or three of you will have
their word heard.
Practice your talk out loud,
standing alone in a room or with friends.
Record it on a tape recorder (or
video) and listen (or watch) yourself. This helps to work out kinks. Time your talk as you
practice.
Be careful about talking too
fast.
While it is not required,
presenters often make PowerPoint slides for their talk. I can get an overhead computer
monitor to display them.
After your talk (or before) email
me a copy of the files you presented (MS Word, or PowerPoint, or HTML). I will post it on
the class web site. You will not receive a grade until you do this.
Suggested Outline for a Presentation
1. Introduction.
a) What is this talk about?
b) Why does it matter to us? What
applications does it have or might have?
c) What will you cover? (show a short
outline of the talk)
d) What is the connection to other topics
in this course
2. References. What did you read or study?
Where did you find it?
3. Main topic. Teach us about this subject in
some depth. This is the longest part of the talk. If you provide a tool demonstration, it
should go here
4. Analysis. What do other experts think
about this? What do you think and why?
Grading of the Presentation
Your grade will be based on:
·
Presentation. The
visual aids should be easy to read and you should speak slowly and clearly. Your
appearance and manner count here.
·
Organization. The talk
should move in a logical sequence and be easy to follow.
·
Content / depth
You should cover the topic. The right amount of material. If you try to say too much, you
will run long or be rushing. If you say too little, you won't use the available time. Some
of us know the broad outlines of these topics already. Give us some technical insight.
Examples are very helpful in explaining new topics.
·
Analysis -- Show that
you thought about this topic and bring your own ideas to the talk.
References -- A variety of sources. Show that you did some research in the library or Internet.