PH551 - CAPSTONES IN PHYSICS: QUANTUM
PHYSICS
The art and science of the 10-minute
presentation
Successful presentations
   - end on time
   
   
 - are clear and logical
   
   
 - have information presented graphically or pictorially where
   possible
 
Transparencies/foils/slides
   - at least 2 minutes per foil on average - much less & the
   audience gets frustrated (a maximum of 5-6 foils for this
   talk)
   
   
 - don't fill them with derivations (if it's not important to
   derive it, don't)
   
   
 - graphical information is easier to absorb quickly while
   someone talks
   
   
 - big fonts (at least 24 point)
   
   
 - use color for interest, but
   not
   so
   much
   that
   it
   gets
   confusing
 
Content - what to say
   - isolate what you thought was most interesting and focus on
   that
   
   
 - everyone did a calculation - there's no need to show them how
   intricate yours was!
   
   
 - highlight salient points - put up the result you calculated
   and take time to explain where each element came from
   
   
 - physical content - how big is the number you calculated? Plot
   the result. Show some experimental data. What approximations are
   important? What is this technique used for, or why is what you've
   calculated philosophically interesting?
 
What not to say
   - "I'll come back to this if I have time." You won't.
   
   
 - "I won't show you this foil."
   
   
 - "You can't really see it from this foil, but ........ "
 
What to do
   - Practice your talk beforehand; at least 3 times. (It always
   takes twice as long in the shower, because you go back and correct
   yourself).
   
   
 - Look at your overhead foils beforehand from the back of the
   room.
   
   
 - Stand well away from the overhead projector when you talk, and
   face the audience, not the screen.
   
   
 - Use a pointer or pen to point as you talk - your finger is too
   thick.
   
   
 - Know your audience.
   
   
 - Relax, smile, you're doing fine!
 
What not to do
   - Don't flip back through foils, desparately searching for one
   that you could equally well refer to with a well chosen phrase
   
   
 - Don't constantly touch the foil as you talk or rearrange it
   ever so slightly - the audience sees the text jumping around.
   
   
 - Don't get in the way of the overhead image - shoulders
   particularly are a problem here!
 
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