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Presentations and Reports
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Third Week (2/2/12) Meet at the Albertsons Library in room LIB 203 Beth Brin will demonstrate the use of several databases suitable for searching for computer science journal articles.
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Goal: to Communicate Both presentations and reports should have a purpose to inform to convince The content should support that purpose The content of a 10 page paper and a 10 minute presentation cannot be the same
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Format for communicating Introduction: Tell the audience what you are going to say Purpose of talk Organization Content: Tell the audience what you want them to know Conclusions: Tell the audience what you said
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Before you start writing Allow yourself time to think about what you want to say write down any thoughts you have about things you want to say Do any necessary research in advance you may need time to follow up on details Make an outline Think about who your audience is
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Presentation Tips Visual aids should supplement the presentation. The medium is not the message Start with ideas Use visual aids to reinforce them Limit text in slides Use slides for pictures and graphs which can't be easily put into words
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Papers vs. Presentations Different media have different needs Listeners need more repetition than readers Look at posting 918 at http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept- ctl/tomprof/posting.php for suggestions about converting a paper into a talk http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept- ctl/tomprof/posting.php
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Design Issues Using PowerPoint does not automatically make your presentation good Each slide should make a point Pictures and graphs are information rich Make your slides easy to read
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Use reasonably big fonts 32 point 28 point 24 point 20 point 16 point It needs to be readable by everyone in the audience
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Limit amount of text on slide Don’t make your bullets too long; the audience won't have time to read the whole thing Consider handouts for large amounts of text Short bullets can be read quickly Everything doesn't have to be on the slide You can elaborate as you speak Don't put too many on one slide
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Use Color Carefully Contrast too high is jarring too low makes it hard to read Complementary colors
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Special effects get old fast This animation does not really add anything useful to the presentation
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Some references PowerPoint Presentations: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly http://www.shkaminski.com/Classes/Handou ts/powerpoint.htm http://www.shkaminski.com/Classes/Handou ts/powerpoint.htm Is PowerPoint Evil? Wired Magazine, September 2003, page 112, 118 In Defense of PowerPoint, Computer July 2004, page 100
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More References Kode Vicious: Presenting Your Project, Communications of the ACM 53 #8 2010 page 33 Technical Writing Tools for Engineers and Scientists, Computing in Science and Engineering, Sept/Oct 2010 page 98
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Reports You need to write your report in a format suitable for a journal or conference publication Format for submission to ACM journals http://www.acm.org/publications/panel/subm ission http://www.acm.org/publications/panel/subm ission Templates available for LaTex and Microsoft Word
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laTex A page formatting language commonly used for scientific papers Based on Tex which was created by computer scientist Donald Knuth kile provides a user interface for creating and viewing laTex documents
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Rubrics Rubric used to evaluate reports and presentations are in handouts directory http://cs.boisestate.edu/~tcole/cs498/spr09/ha ndouts/ http://cs.boisestate.edu/~tcole/cs498/spr09/ha ndouts/ We use these rubrics to assess how well students are learning communication skills
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Report Requirements Use a format suitable for a journal or conference publication 10-12 pages 6-8 references that should be cited in the body of the paper
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Rubric for Report Report Contents Introduction Body of Report Conclusions and recommendations References Purpose Stated Accurate and relevant information Logical Presentation of of Material Grammar & Composition Grammar Spelling Punctuation Sentence Structure Efficient Wording
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Presentation Requirements 10-12 minutes for presentation, 3 minutes for questions Appropriate use of visual aids Presentation should include Introduction Logical presentation of the information being conveyed Conclusions
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Rubric for Presentation Contents Opening and introduction Supports central idea Is well organized Ties presentation together Invites discussion or questions Stays within time limits Visual Aids clear & easy to read Delivery Appropriate volume, clear pronunciation Responses to questions Doesn't read slides Eye contact with audience
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