1 / 8

Poster Basics

Poster Basics. Sherry Wynn Perdue Oakland University Writing Center 212 Kresge Library (248) 370-3120 www.oakland.edu/ouwc. Rhetorical Purpose. Who is my audience? Mixed-discipline What is my purpose? To get my audience to read my paper and/or ask for more information

opa
Download Presentation

Poster Basics

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. Poster Basics Sherry Wynn Perdue Oakland University Writing Center 212 Kresge Library (248) 370-3120 www.oakland.edu/ouwc

  2. Rhetorical Purpose • Who is my audience? • Mixed-discipline • What is my purpose? • To get my audience to read my paper and/or ask for more information • For what situation/context do I compose? • A setting ripe for information overload. Don’t give viewers additional distractions. • What are the conventions of the genre? • Visual short-hand. Less is more.

  3. Pivotal Design Question Acknowledge the limits of your influence: You have 30 seconds at a distance to convey your message. Ask: If the viewer remembers only one thing about my work, what will it be?

  4. Entitlement • Convey a tangible, purpose-oriented message with as few words as possible. • Consider adding a sub-title if presenting a complex message • Consider forming a provocative question in lieu of statement title

  5. Headers Headings serve two purposes: • Provide order to the message • Convey key points or sections, such as Research Design/Methods, Findings, etc. To be effective, consider: • Typeface: Sans Serif • Helvetica, AvantGarde, Franklin Gothic • Size: Readable from a distance (4 feet away) • Color: Contrast but clear and readable

  6. Layout Concerns • Clear progression, usually by columns from left to right • Sectioned: Avoid one long stream of text • Ample white space between items • Cropped with straight edges (don’t “eyeball alignment)

  7. Resources The Dos and Don’t s of Power Presentation by Steven M. Block Poster Presentations by The University for Wisconsin-Madison Creating Effective Poster Presentations::Create Your Poster:: Headings by Hess, Tosney, and Liegel Designing Conference Posters by Colin Purrington

  8. PPT Poster Presentation Templates • http://www.posterpresentations.com/html/free_poster_templates.html?gclid=CKnG8NKNwrICFeUWMgodgwgATw • http://colinpurrington.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/postertemplateppt.zip • http://www.posterpresentations.com/html/free_poster_templates.html • http://www.genigraphics.com/other/poster_templates.asp • http://colinpurrington.com/tips/academic/posterdesign • Instead of hand-constructing your poster, you can use PowerPoint to create one that you then have printed by a professional company. • In the alternative, you can use PPT to print sections of the poster, which you hand position on poster-board.

More Related