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Presentations

Presentations

Why give presentations?

You learn more. Researching and presenting a subject usually results
in better understanding and recall.

Presentations are very much part of the world of work. Job
interviews often involve presentations, and they are a common aspect
of many jobs.

You can gain a lot of satisfaction by preparing and delivering group
presentations as part of team.

Presentations often stimulate useful discussion with other class
members which helps your engagement with and understanding of
the subject. 

General concerns

Most are about delivery - standing up in front of people:
Some are to do with content:

Im not sure what to put in and what to leave out

I can never fit it all in

Im not sure what I should be covering...

Whatever your concerns, identify them so you can use this leaflet effectively. Identify your strengths as well and think about how you can enhance them. Presentations should work for you help you build skills and confidence to carry with you after your time as a student.

What makes an effective presentation?

You need to think about

Research
Planning
Structure
Visual Aids

Research

This kind of research is about finding out exactly what you need to do in a particular presentation. It helps to consider some basic questions at the start:

Why am I giving this presentation?
What are the criteria?
What essential content should I have in?
What are the audience/tutors looking for?
What do I not need/have any time for?
How much time do I have?

Check what criteria will be used to assess your presentation.
In particular, be clear what the focus of the talk has to be, and what your argument (point of view) has to cover, and what kind of conclusions you need to draw.

Are you:

Explaining something?
Arguing a point of view?
Presenting the results of an experiment or study?
Outlining a process?
A bit of all these???

Check the type of information you need to cover, how much detail is required, and whether particular visuals are needed. These could be pictures, diagrams, charts etc.

Think about who will be in the audience. This affects the type of information, and the kind of language/visuals you use, as well as how you deliver your presentation.

Think of any aspect of the task that you are unsure about, and approach a tutor, and/or fellow students for clarification.

Now you can get on with the planning and preparation with the confidence that you are on the right lines.

Planning

Allocating time

Plan how to use the time right at the start of your planning. This way, you have a realistic picture of how much you can cover. Its also much easier to start from a few main points and gradually expand your material, than start with everything you know and try to cut down.

Here's an example of a 10-minute talk:

1 min: introduce self and topic
1 min: clarify aims of presentation
7 min: main body of talk (main points, information, analysis, examples)
1 min: conclusion

Divide your material into the essential points you definitely want to
make, and the extra material you can use if there is time

Decide what you need to back up the key points.
This could be partly information, partly analysis be clear about the
difference, or your presentation could provide a lot of information but not enough analysis. Start with the main points/analysis, and then think of the information/detail you need to support them.

Be clear about the:
Content of your presentation (information and examples)
and what you want it to
Show (ideas, analysis and conclusions)

Spend time planning and simplifying your information and ideas.
Think in terms ofkey point, explanations and examples

Structure

The structure is about how you put the presentation together, and how you make this structure clear to the audience. The audience will soon get lost if you jump around and dont make the structure explicit.

The different sections should follow logically, and you should have a clear introduction and conclusion but these should only be brief!

Decide the best and most logical order for your points
Select information and evidence to support them
Decide where the visuals will go
Clarify the main points for your introduction and conclusion

The PowerPoint slides you use should help make the structure clear.

They should normally include:

Title of talk
Brief list of sections (2,3 or 4 headings)
A slide for each section, with any appropriate diagram/graph if needed
Concluding slide
Bibliography slide not too long, but same referencing as an essay

As part of the structure, you need to work on

Visual aids

It is hard just to listen to someone talk, and keeps pressure on the speaker. It also helps for the audience to have prompts to refer to on a screen. Think about what would be effective clear handouts? Slides/PowerPoint? Flip charts?

You could equally well prepare a large poster or diagram if it gets your
message across effectively and enhances what you are saying.

Whatever visual aids you decide to use, make sure they are relevant and clearly presented or they can become a distraction from the main message.

Again, check to see if there is a preferred format you should be using for visual aids before you spend time preparing materials.

If you use PowerPoint:

Use a large font-size about 32-point is good

Be consistent with font, format etc.

Times and Arial are both good clear fonts to use.

Be careful with the size of font anything smaller than 24 could be hard to read on a slide.

Dont use too much text just the main points

30 words are about the maximum you should put on a slide any
more, and the audience concentrate on reading rather than listening!

About 3 or 4 short headings is enough for one slide

Dont cram in too many pages one page for every 2-3 minutes of
talk is fine

Keep diagrams and graphs simple use labelling that helps clarify
your point and no more

Avoid flashy sound effects and graphics, unless they are really
essential!

Effective delivery

1- Prompt cards

2- Have a clear structure

3- Body language

4- Voice and language

5- Practice!

Prompt cards

Try using index cards for delivering the talk.
These can contain key points, facts, statistics that you want to mention in
connection with each slide or overhead.
Have one card for each image
Use for key information only
Keep minimal no sentences
Use colour, stars, highlighter to help you glance quickly
Glance, dont read! (use your thumb to mark the spot so you can find it
again for the next glance))
Fasten together in one corner and number them

It can also be useful to note good link words at the bottom of each card,
that help you introduce the next slide smoothly, such as:

an alternative view is
we should also consider
an additional area to look at is

Making the structure clear

-Use the introduction to frame the structure

-Indicate the sections/stages as you progress

-Emphasise the key ideas

-Briefly sum up the main points as you go

-Use other signposts

Body language

This is where you need to practise in front of friends and/or family:

Ask for feedback on: Eye contact, position (best to stand on the left of any screen/projector), hands,
feet (best to stand firmly on both feet it looks and feels more confident).

You dont have to change your personality to give a presentation, but it can help to tone down any exaggerated hand movements or habits like fiddling with your hair, rings etc.

Voice and language

Speak to the back of the group or room
Speak more slowly than you think you should
Use short sentences visualise full stops
Keep language simple where possible long words only where necessary
Allow pauses between slides, pointslet the audience take it in
Be true to yourself dont imitate a style that isnt yours

Practice

It makes a big difference if you practise your talk several times.Take it slowly and time yourself.

Prepare a strong opening sentence, so that you sound confident at the start. Prepare a strong final sentence as well its fine simply to say That concludes my presentation, thank you for listening. Does anyone have any questions? or Im happy to try and answer any questions.

Practise glancing at the prompt cards then looking up to speak Reading everything from notes can sound lifeless.

Find a friendand ask them to listen to you run it through. Ask them to comment on specific things: body language, tone of voice, speed of delivery its hard to judge these things yourself.

Make small changes and rehearse it with a small audience again it can be surprisingly nerve-wracking even with one person watching so you can get over some of the initial nerves this way.

Dealing with nerves

Everyone feels nervous when they speak in public, and in many ways this can
help your performance. However, nerves can also undermine confidence
unless you have thought ahead and worked out how to deal with them.
Effective ways of building confidence are:

Preparation: 
Remind yourself you have practised and prepared as much as you can, then
you wont have a nagging feeling that you have missed something out.

Anticipation:
Thinking about your own triggers for nerves and planning how to deal with
these can put you more in control and help build confidence in your own
coping skills.

Tips for dealing with nerves

Put time aside to think about these:

Identify your triggers for nerves (starting late? Missing out a point?)

Get used to pauses in your presentation practise pausing

Plan a strategy for blanks what will you do?

Dont apologise unnecessarily

If you are running over time, keep going as planned until the last minute, then cut to the conclusion dont try to rush through everything or edit as you go along

Apologise boldly if things go wrong keep the audience informed and say what is happeningIll just have to check my notes hereIm sorry, Ill just take a minute to think about my next point. That way you keep in control of the situation.

Smile! Not fixedly all the time but at the start of a slide or a point it relaxes your throat, helps breathing and makes you look more confident.

Anticipation

Think about how you would deal with thesethey happen!

Equipment fails

Omitting key facts

Noise

Dry throat (have a glass of water..)

Losing the thread

Time running out

People come in late

Nobody smiles(they dont have tobut it helps when they do)

Ask other students what they doplan strategies that will work for you.

Dealing with questions

Repeat the question to clarify. That way, you make sure everyone else has heard the question, and you give yourself more time to think.

When you answer questions, it is OK to say simply Im afraid I dont know the answer to that question and maybe suggest where the answer might be found. Dont try to bluff your way through a tough question be honest!

Look at the questioner it helps you to stick to answering the question rather than going off at a tangent.

The day before

It sounds obvious, but check the basics:

Room?

Time of talk?

Equipment ordered?

Clock, glass of water sorted out?

Anything else?

On the day

Arrive early

This gives you time to make sure the equipment is working, sort out your
prompt cards and it feels better than walking into a room full of faces

Take a few deep breaths

Remind yourself to speak slowly

Wait until everyone is settled

Introduce your talk clearly at the beginning state the topic and the things
you will be covering

During the talk, look up and make firm eye contact from time to time with
the audience. Try concentrating on the hair-line of the people in the back-row.
It looks like eye-contact, but can be less distracting.

Try looking at l different sections of the audience in turn left, middle, right

Dont apologise for anything that you think could be better.

Act as confidently as you can, and you will convince the audience like-wise.
Pause between points breathe it gives the audience time to take in what
you are saying. It also looks more confident and professional.

At the end, briefly sum up what you have been saying.

Prepare a good line to end with. Simply smiling and saying Thank you for
listening. Would anyone like to ask any questions? is perfectly fine.

Key things to avoid

Cramming in too much material

Adding things at the last minute

Over-loading your slides

Speeding up

Talking for the sake of talking stop and take a breath

Key points to remember

Check whats needed
Plan and structure
Timing
Practice
Make changes
Keep it simple
Take controlbreath
Communicate enthusiasm!

and finally... Attitude

Be positive, think how much preparation youve done, and concentrate on
the points you want to communicate you need to really want to get them
across! Summon enthusiasm for your subject and words will flow more easily.

Think: Im in control of this. Any mistakes or difficulties will be dealt with by
me, and Ill tell the audience what is happening eg Im just going to gather
my thoughts about this question for a minute instead of panicking in
silence. A clear statement of what you are doing has the double effect of
informing the audience, and motivating you to do what you say you are doing!

Remind yourself to breathe between pointsor sentences think breathe
and it will help you focus

Remember to learn from the process each time. It doesnt have to be perfect!