1 / 20

First year presentations …something to be scared of? …nothing to be scared of?

First year presentations …something to be scared of? …nothing to be scared of?. Deborah Worton. Rules of engagement. No strict agenda or running order This is a session for you so JUMP IN! Ask any questions you like Whenever you like Talk about your experiences, concerns.

gaille
Download Presentation

First year presentations …something to be scared of? …nothing to be scared of?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. First year presentations…something to be scared of?…nothing to be scared of? Deborah Worton

  2. Rules of engagement • No strict agenda or running order • This is a session for you so JUMP IN! • Ask any questions you like • Whenever you like • Talk about your experiences, concerns

  3. Important questions • What is the pass mark for the first year presentation? • What happens if you fail the first year presentation? • Will I have to repeat my first year? • Will they throw me out? • NO!

  4. Important questions • Is it an opportunity for academic professionals: • to decide whether your idea is good enough? • to decide whether you have done enough work to go on to Year 2? • to pick holes in your work? • to give you a hard time to see if you really know your stuff?

  5. So what is it for? • Writing phase: a chance to • review…bring together everything done to date…see gaps and opportunities • make choices for the future • The presentation itself: a chance to • share your enthusiasm for your topic • practice being an authority on your subject • get feedback and constructive comments

  6. So what is it for? • Afterwards • Increased confidence in your ideas • Clearer vision • Enthusiasm to take the next step • A better project

  7. Who will be there? • Your supervisor • Members of the academic team • Your supervisor’s peers! • Experienced and skilled • Fellow students • How much do any of them know about your specific topic?

  8. Who will be there? They are all on your side! • Your supervisor • Members of the academic team • Your supervisor’s peers! • Experienced and skilled • Fellow students • How much do they know about your specific topic?

  9. How to get started • Go to the Form Storehttp://www.soton.ac.uk/hpgr/documents/form_store.html • On left hand navigation bar, find “1st year presentations – sample guidelines” • Talk to your supervisor…each discipline is slightly different in what they want

  10. How to get started • Effectively you are turning a summary of you’re your early work into a presentation • Can’t get everything in! • Remember who your audience is: • not specialist so contextualise your research (give the background)

  11. YOU ONLY HAVE 15 MINUTES! • What to include? What to leave out? • To read or not to read? • Hand-outs or no hand-outs? • PowerPoint or no PowerPoint?

  12. PowerPoint: an alternative view • “I think we've developed the mindset that one MUST use it, or SHOULD use it, and in most cases it's nothing but distracting.  There are certain types of presentations for which it's really useful - those where the visual is paramount to the talk, that sort of thing.  But for the rest of 'em, I don't think PowerPoint is all that helpful (and in many cases, it's even worse, it actually detracts from the presentation).”(Denise Greenfield, 2010: English)

  13. PowerPoint: an alternative view • Good for showing: • Quotations • Photos/visuals/graphs/charts/numbers • Good for organising thoughts • Could do 2 - one for self and one for presentation…Deb’s method! • Could use a blend of ‘paper’ and PP

  14. PowerPoint and handouts • Make an ACTIVE decision of what to use …or what not to use! • Make them relevant • Use them to cover stuff that would be too time-consuming to speak about…a picture paints a thousand words!

  15. Questions, answers, feedback • You will get asked questions! • Eleanor’s quick fix answers for ‘I haven’t got a clue’ questions: • “That’s a direction in which I aim to go in the next few months” • “I have started to look at that, but I need to do more research”

  16. Questions, answers, feedback • Take a notepad with you • These are gems that you shouldn’t lose • Arrange a meeting with your advisor as soon as possible • Extra feedback often given afterwards that can be useful

  17. Vital points • Practice, practice, practice • And when you think you’ve done enough, practice some more! • Don’t forget to practice with equipment too • Check out the room and the equipment. • In advance • On the day, early

  18. Vital points • Nerves…breathing helps! • Do you get the shakes? • Umms, ahhs and other fillers • Control paper…card is good! • Practice • Who are you talking to? • Everyone! • Eye contact…even if reading

  19. A final thought…

  20. A final thought… Have fun!

More Related