Notes on Student Presentations
From Simson Garfinkel
Revision as of 20:18, 4 March 2022 by Simson (talk | contribs) (→Basic Things to Remember when Creating Slides)
Notes for Students
Making a scientific presentation is a challenge for many students, so it is an important learning experience.
Basic Things to Remember when Creating Slides
- The first slide should clearly indicate:
- Your Name
- Date of presentation
- Version number of slide deck
- Any disclaimers
- Slide's permanent URL
- If your slides are reviewing an article, the first slide should also indicate the article's title, author(s), publication venue, and date.
- Expand all acronyms on first use.
- Use the entire slide!
- Don't use small fonts. A good rule of thumb is don't use a pointsize in powerpoint that is smaller than 24. However, your best bet is to take your slides into the room and try them out several days in advance to verify that they can be seen from the last row in the classroom.
- Make your slides high-contrast. Ideally your slides should be black text on a white background, as this is the most legible. You can use colors like red and blue for emphasis. Remember, a significant fraction of the population cannot distinguish the colors red and green.
- Your slides should clearly present the information you want to present.
- Put a page number on every slide so that they can be referred to.
- Your last slide should have your important points. Don't waste it with the word "Questions" and nothing else.
Make your headlines count by using sentence headlines and the Michael Alley's "assertion evidence" slide format. See:
- Assertion Evidence Slide Format!
- "Presenting as an Engineer or Scientist:" http://writing.engr.psu.edu/speaking.html
- Notes on presentations: http://writing.engr.psu.edu/courses/presentations.html
- Lecture on YouTube Video 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7950IuJ0RHg
- Book: http://www.springer.com/us/book/9781441982780
Goals
There are many goals in making a presentation on a scientific topic:
- First and foremost, you are seeking to present information that is technical. Make sure that your presentation has **sufficient technical depth**.
- If you are presenting about a specific discovery or advance, you need to put the contribution in context.
- You need to explain its significance, also called the contribution of the research.
References
Good Blogs on Giving Talks
I reviewed more than a dozen blogs about giving talks, and thought that these were the best:
- "How to give a dynamic scientific presentation", Elsevier.com, Marilynn Larkin, August 2015. (Marilynn Larkin is an award-winning science writer and editor who develops content for medical, scientific and consumer audiences.)
- Tips for giving a successful scientific presentation, Milka Kostic, January 2017 in Cell's Mentor column. (Milka Kostic is the former Senior Editor of Cell Chemical Biology and Structure. She left Cell Press in 2017.)
- "Making a short presentation based on your research: 11 tips", Markus Goldstein and David Evans, The World Bank, March 2016
- "Scientific presentations: A cheat sheet" Nature Jobs Blog, Andrew Gaudet and Laura Fonken, January 2017. (Andrew and Laura are postdocs at the University of Colorado, Boulder)
- "Mastering Your Ph.D.: Giving a Great Presentation", Patricia Gosling and Bart Noordam, Science, Oct 2006.
Presentations on Scientific Presentations
For people who don't like reading that much:
- Karl Browman's June 2014 talk on giving talks, Department of Biostatistics & Medical Informatics University of Wisconsin – Madison
- http://mcnair.ucsb.edu/documents/HowtoCreateaResearchPresentation_000.pdf
- https://dornsife.usc.edu/assets/sites/605/docs/Tips_10_minute_Scientific_PowerPoint_Presentation_Meds_490.pdf
- http://theory.bio.uu.nl/MERIT/pdf/cst1williams.pdf
Notes for Faculty
What to present
- Have students give presentations early in the course: it helps to integrate the class.
- Have students present a paper
- Have students present final projects
The presentations
- Have students submit their slides at least 4 days before the presentation, so you can offer criticism with enough time for the students to improve them.
- Force students to turn in draft presentations by having a grade assigned for turning them in (1 point)
- Format really doesn't matter.
- Give students a time limit
- Enforce the time limit