1 / 15

Communicating about your research

Communicating about your research. Authoring a PhD and Developing as a Researcher: Getting Started Dr Gita Subrahmanyam Dr Kirsten Haack. Communication: the key to effective research. Research can only make a difference if people know about it and understand it

kelda
Download Presentation

Communicating about your research

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. Communicating about your research Authoring a PhD and Developing as a Researcher: Getting Started Dr Gita Subrahmanyam Dr Kirsten Haack

  2. Communication: the key to effective research • Research can only make a difference if people know about it and understand it • Effective communication helps you to better understand what you’re doing • You need to communicate: at seminars, conferences, job interviews, etc. • Communication is a critical professional skill in any walk of life

  3. Overview of workshop • Warm-up exercise: dinner party test • Writing effective research profiles • Presenting your research effectively • Personal websites for PhD students

  4. Warm up: the dinner party test • Find a partner at your table that you don’t already know • Take 1 minute (each) to introduce yourself and your research topic/area to your partner • Now introduce your partner and his/her research topic/area to the rest of the people at your table • Each person at your table should take a turn doing this

  5. Feedback: the dinner party test • Was what was said by your partner about your research an accurate description? • If you needed to correct him/her on certain aspects, then perhaps you need to work on your informal communication skills! • What else did you learn from this exercise?

  6. Short research profiles • Useful for communicating your research in emails (for networking), on your CV, or on the web • Effective research profiles are: • Concise • To the point/specific • Impactful • Avoid jargon • Writing an effective research summary or profile – handout

  7. Short research profiles: practical exercise • Take 10 minutes to write a brief (1-2 paragraphs = 150 words max) profile of your planned PhD research • Form a mini group with 2 other people at your table • In your mini group, read and feed back on each other’s profiles using the handout as a guide (approx 5 minutes on each profile)

  8. Effective oral communication • Take 10 minutes to prepare a 2 minute presentation on your research plans. • Make good use of the work you’ve done so far in the session, and the feedback you’ve been given. • Giant post-it notes and markers are available to create a visual aid (optional)

  9. Tips for creating your presentation • Introduce yourself, then present your big idea, big question or fascinating problem – something gripping which creates interest. • Don’t pack in too much information – in two minutes you can only really make one point. • Remember the audience – what do they really need to know? Cut extraneous details. • End high: emphasise your main point, your main ‘take-away’ message

  10. Presentations and feedback • Form a new group with everyone at your table. • Assign a timekeeper to ensure that each speaker keeps to the 2-minute limit (someone may need to timekeep the timekeeper!) • Each group member should present his/her research, while other group members make notes using the feedback sheet. • After everyone has spoken, feed back to each member of the group.

  11. Personal websites for PhD students 1 • Why have them? • Some departments offer students the opportunity to have a web presence on the departmental site: • Simple example • More fancy example • Advantages: easy to set up, low maintenance, seen as part of department • Disadvantages: constrained information and layout, not much space, may not be easy to update

  12. Personal websites for PhD students 2 • Alternatively (or additionally) you can create your own personal website • The School offers this facility to all students and staff • Setting up your own website is a powerful communication method, but it takes careful thought, planning and ongoing maintenance

  13. LSE resources for personal websites • To register for a personal website go to http://www2.lse.ac.uk/itservices/guides/OnlineGuides/personal-webspace-registration.aspx • Note that School provides space for ‘academic and related purposes’ • Guide to the technical aspects of creating a personal website at http://ittraining.lse.ac.uk/courseResources/FrontPage2003CreatingAPersonalWebsite.htm • Level of interest? Organise interactive training workshop

  14. Other resources for personal websites • www.academia.edu • social networking for academics • focus on research areas • university-based profile • free web templates (www.free-css.com/) • greater flexibility for design and content • should be linked from/to other website(s) example: http://personal.lse.ac.uk/CHWIEROT/

  15. Final thoughts • You should put your research profiles up on your departmental page – for example http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/DESTIN/whosWho/phdVargas.htm • Some departments allow you to include a link to your personal web page http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/media@lse/whosWho/PhDStudentsList.htm • Has this workshop fulfilled your aims and expectations? Please let us know – fill in an evaluation form

More Related