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To be able to give a presentation to a designated audience To be able to distinguish between what makes a good presentation and what makes a bad one To be able to explain how to plan, deliver and evaluate a presentation
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Who do you think is a good presenter and why? Who would you say is a bad presenter and why?
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Aims: identify purpose and objectives Consider audience and environment Structure your presentation Prepare your notes and visual aids Practice the presentation Deliver the presentation Evaluate your performance
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Why are you saying it? (The aim) Who are you saying it to? (The audience) What are you going to say? (The content) How are you going to say it? (The structure)
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To inform: To tell or to impart factual knowledge to a group. To make a proposition: To sell or persuade the audience to support an idea or plan. To inspire and motivate: To impel. To generate enthusiasm and develop positive attitudes.
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Who are the members of the audience and what do they do? What is the benefit to the audience of listening to your presentation? What do they already know about the subject? What is the relationship between yourself and the audience? What interests your audience? How will what you are going to say affect them?
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alienated – if you offend their value system insulted – if you fail to recognise and acknowledge their existing knowledge and experience confused – if you assume a level of knowledge or expertise that is not there bored – if you fail to relate to their needs patronised – if you use an inappropriate style frustrated – if they are not given the opportunity to question or contribute
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What technology will you have? How much space will you have? Where will the audience be? Lighting? Temperature?
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Consider a presentation that you have seen that was very effective. What made it so? Consider a presentation that you have seen that you thought was unsuccessful. What made it so?
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Tell them what you are going to tell them. Tell them. Tell them what you told them.
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Tell them who you are and why you are giving this presentation Tell them what the presentation is about Tell them what your objectives are Tell them what the background to the presentation is Tell them what is in it for them Opening attention grabber
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Give details of your topic in a logical, smoothly linking order Take advantage of the primacy and recency effect Use anecdotes and real examples to illustrate your points Tell them how this information applies to them Back up all the claims that you made at the start
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Summarise your key points Remind them of: the advantages of your position, solution, options, conclusions Tell them what you want them to do next Tell them how to contact you Closing attention grabber Invite questions Try to end on a high. Avoid saying “That’s it!”
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Continuous eye contact or staring Constantly rubbing an eye, nose or ear Keep clearing your throat Clenching your hands or pointing Crossing your arms or legs Shuffling your feet and swaying Smiling or raising your eyebrows in a way that suggests you don’t value your audience’s contribution!
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Stand up straight and face the audience head-on Hold your head up high, with your chin up Use your hands to emphasise and reinforce Vary your gestures Nod your head and smile to emphasise what you are saying Make proper eye contact
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Be audible Use pauses for emphasis, or to regain their attention Do not mumble or drop your voice at the end of sentences Vary the speed with which you talk to keep their attention Alter the volume and tone of your voice for emphasis Sound enthusiastic Avoid jargon Monitor your use of ‘um’, ‘er’ and ‘actually’
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Avoid negative self-talk Do not run over your allocated time slot Prepare, practise and bring all you need Know your audience Visualise yourself succeeding Act confident to feel confident Do not stress “what could have been” or “what should have been”
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P urpose - establish what it is R esearch your topic E xperiment with visual aids P lace – what is it like? A udience – know who they are R ehearse your performance E arly – arrive well in advance
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Resources: http://www.learnhigher.ac.uk Murray, R. (2003). How to survive your viva. Maidenhead: Open University Press Stott, R.,Young T., Bryan, C. (Eds.)(2001). Speaking your Mind Harlow: Pearson Education Ltd. Levin, P. & Topping G. (2006). Perfect Presentations! Maidenhead: Open University Press
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