Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAngelica Nichols Modified over 8 years ago
1
Preparing your research presentations Posters or talks? which is best?
2
You can do it! A conference presentation is your chance to show people what you can do! Think carefully about the title – it is your shop window, your advertising. If it is not interesting, no one will come to hear about your work. Think about the introductory statements – the first few sentences: this is where you must grasp the attention of your audience Think about the conclusions: these are the ‘take-home message’ – what you want people to remember.
3
Plan for the allotted time. Are you presenting a 10-minute talk? 3-minute thesis talk? 1-minute data blast? The time-limit is fixed! It is absolutely essential to stick to time. Are you preparing a poster presentation? This is more complicated – some visitors to your poster are generally interested, some want to know the details……..
4
Know your audience……. In general PhD students can assume the people in the audience have similar level of background knowledge as they have. However……. Introduction – carefully explain the title, speak slowly and deliberately pause between items to check the faces of your audience – are they following you? Be prepared to rephrase something if you can see it was not understood. Methods – particularly try to avoid jargon and keep abbreviations to a minimum (assume ATP and NMDA are Ok, anything else should be banned!) Discussion – the ‘take-home’ message. Speak even more slowly…….
5
For an oral communication, timing is of the essence! For a talk, practice at least three times For a poster, go through it with at least three different people
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.