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papers [2019/03/05 11:00] janettatepapers [2020/03/06 09:12] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1
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 OSU Student Media Services, located in the Valley Library, prints posters for free if it is a class assignment. A typical poster size is 3 feet wide, 3.5 - 4 feet tall. Text and diagrams should explain your calculations, and provide other information about your material. During the poster session, you'll stay with your poster for 50% of the time, and circulate around other posters for 50% of the time. OSU Student Media Services, located in the Valley Library, prints posters for free if it is a class assignment. A typical poster size is 3 feet wide, 3.5 - 4 feet tall. Text and diagrams should explain your calculations, and provide other information about your material. During the poster session, you'll stay with your poster for 50% of the time, and circulate around other posters for 50% of the time.
  
-Posters should be uncluttered, informative and visually appealing. Here's [[http://betterposters.blogspot.com/|advice]] from a strong proponent of this statement.  [[https://www.sigmapisigma.org/sigmapisigma/congress/2016/how-present-awesome-poster|Advice]] from the Society of Physics Students about presenting posters.+Posters should be uncluttered, informative and visually appealing.  
 +  * Here's [[http://betterposters.blogspot.com/|advice]] from a strong proponent of this statement.  
 +  * Michael Alley has useful things to say about [[https://www.craftofscientificposters.com/|posters]] and about scientific writing.  
 +  [[https://www.sigmapisigma.org/sigmapisigma/congress/2016/how-present-awesome-poster|Advice]] from the Society of Physics Students about presenting posters.
  
 ===== Paper assignment ===== ===== Paper assignment =====
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 === Collaboration or no? === === Collaboration or no? ===
-Teach each other about how use the Wien and Flair basics.  Share tips on how to use the software, especially on how to get to the DoS and the //E(k)// plots. This just like being in a lab where you show someone how to use a piece of equipment.  This kind of collaboration is healthy, but don't do the work for the other person.  In a lab, you show someone a tool and he or she decides what experiment to do with it.+Teach each other about how use OpenMX basics.  Share tips on how to use the software, especially on how to get to the DoS and the //E(k)// plots. This just like being in a lab where you show someone how to use a piece of equipment.  This kind of collaboration is healthy, but don't do the work for the other person.  In a lab, you show someone a tool and he or she decides what experiment to do with it.
  
 Talk to others to help point you to information, but don't let the other person do all the legwork for you, and likewise, don't do the legwork for others. Talk to others to help point you to information, but don't let the other person do all the legwork for you, and likewise, don't do the legwork for others.

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