Presenting Your Findings - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 44
About This Presentation
Title:

Presenting Your Findings

Description:

For the site-name memory task, participants listed as many of the 50 states and ... When required to label states or cities on an outline map of the U.S., a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:55
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 45
Provided by: FC3
Category:
Tags: findings | map | of | presenting | states | the

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Presenting Your Findings


1
Presenting Your Findings
  • Oral Poster Presentations

Frances L. Chumney, Summer 2005
2
Oral PresentationsThings That Matter
  • Contents (duh!)
  • Graphs, Figures Images
  • Visual Appeal
  • Graphics Illustrations
  • You

3
Contents
  • Title Slide
  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Methods
  • Results
  • Discussion
  • References

4
Contents Title Slide
  • Title of presentation, as reported in the program
    book or original submission
  • Name of authors coauthors
  • Institutional Affiliations
  • Titles, such as Ph.D.

5
Contents Abstract
  • If you include one.

6
Sample Abstract
  • The present study extended the research of
    Zinser, et al. (2004) and Straub and Seaton
    (1993) in five tasks designed to compare the
    configurational knowledge of the U.S. states in
    men and women. For the site-name memory task,
    participants listed as many of the 50 states and
    25 largest cities as they could remember. For the
    site-name-with-map-aid task, an outline map of
    the U.S. was provided. For the map-labeling task,
    participants were required to write the name of
    the states and major cities on the maps. For the
    fragmented U.S. state maps task, participants
    wrote the names of the states and cities on
    cut-outs of each state. For the fifth task, the
    U.S. was shown divided into regions southeast,
    northeast, midwest, west, and southwest, and
    participants were asked to name and draw the
    outlines of each of the continental states within
    its appropriate region and to provide the names
    and locations of the 25 largest cities. A
    demographic questionnaire had the participants
    rate themselves on ability to visualize
    geographic locations, ability to recall state and
    city names with and without a map, and ability to
    give easy-to-follow directions, all before and
    after completing the map tasks. Men performed
    better on the cities of the site-name task, but
    no difference was found on the states measure no
    gender differences were found for the
    site-name-with-map-aid or the map reproduction
    tasks and men performed significantly better
    than did women on both the states and cities of
    the map labeling and the fragmented states
    labeling tasks. The gender difference from the
    fragmented states task suggested that men were
    superior in configurational knowledge of the
    outlines of the states. The ratings and
    experience data suggested that the gender
    differences in knowledge of the cities and states
    of the U. S. were a joint product of nature and
    nurture.

7
Contents Abstracts
  • Heres my abstract for the project.
  • You dont read it.
  • You click past it.
  • Whats the point?

8
Contents Introduction
  • Literature Review
  • Objectives
  • Hypothesis(es)

9
Introduction Literature Review
  • Overview of primary articles
  • Do not summarize each article
  • Main points of each article, as they relate to
    your research project
  • Combine like ideas integrate material from
    different articles
  • Excerpt from paper, if written

10
Sample Lit Review Slide
  • Configurational knowledge is about shape,
    pattern, distribution of items in space, and
    associations with other objects in space
    (Golledge, 1992)
  • When asked to indicate the locations of cities on
    an outline map with no state or regional
    indicators, women made more errors than men
    (Beatty Bruellman, 1987 Montello, et al.,
    1999)
  • When required to label states or cities on an
    outline map of the U.S., a significant gender
    difference favoring men has been found for states
    (Straub and Seaton, 1993), and cities (Beatty and
    Bruellman, 1987 Beatty and Tröster, 1987)

11
Introduction Objectives
  • Good idea, but regarded as optional
  • Objectives of the project, not of the
    presentation
  • Why did you do the research?
  • Potential impact of this line of research
  • Supported by lit review presented

12
Introduction Hypothesis(es)
  • They deserve a slide
  • Short and simple
  • Elaborate orally
  • Logical ordering on slide
  • Usually, one per condition

13
Sample Hypotheses Slide
  • Site-name Memory No significant gender
    differences were expected
  • Site-name with Map-aid A significant gender
    difference was expected for the states, but not
    for the cities portion of this task
  • Map Labeling Men were expected to identify a
    significantly larger number of states and cities
  • Fragmented U.S. States Will illustrate the
    effect of state shape or configuration on
    geographic knowledge A gender difference
    favoring men was expected
  • Map Reproduction Will show the knowledge of and
    ability to reproduce configurational information
    about the relative shapes, sizes, and locations
    of U.S. states and cities men expected to
    perform better

14
Contents Method
  • Participants
  • Materials
  • Procedure

15
Method Participants
  • Sample size
  • Where sample came from
  • Distinguishing characteristics of the sample
  • Breakdown of important demographic characteristics

16
Method Materials/Measures
  • List of materials/measures used
  • Mention by name
  • Present in order presented or in order consistent
    with rest of the presentation
  • List of equipment
  • Arrange by condition, if necessary

17
Sample Materials Slide
  • Fragmented U.S. States
  • Participants were provided with pages containing
    the outlines of the fifty individual U.S. states
    separated from each other and organized in random
    order.
  • The cities portion of this task consisted of the
    random arrangement of the states that included at
    least one of the twenty-five most highly
    populated cities, marked by large dots.
  • Map Reproduction of U.S. States and Cities
  • Participants were provided an outline of the U.
    S. with regional boundaries defining 5 major
    regions of the United States Southeast,
    Southwest, Northeast, West, and Midwest.
    Participants were asked to draw outlines and
    label the 48 contiguous states, and mark with a
    dot and label the 25 largest cities of the U.S.

18
Sample Materials Slide, cont.
19
Sample Materials Slide, cont.
20
Method Procedure
  • Order in which sections of study were completed
  • Time or other limitations created by experimenter
  • Scoring, if logical

21
Contents Results
  • Organize by hypothesis
  • Say it in numbers, say it in words
  • Relevant to the discussion you present
  • Statistics to show what you did
  • Tables or matrices, as needed

22
Sample Results Slide
23
Sample Results Slide, cont.
  • Fragmented U. S. States
  • Significant differences favoring men were found
    for both the states and cities tasks
  • Self-Ratings Ratings for all four items
    decreased significantly for both men and women
  • Map Reproduction
  • Significant gender differences were not found on
    either the states or cities portion of this
    condition
  • Self-Ratings Ratings for all four items
    decreased significantly for both men and women

24
Sample Results Slide, cont.
25
Contents Discussion
  • Organize by hypothesis
  • Interpret the results
  • Elaborate on the possible implications of the
    results that you found
  • Draw conclusions
  • Future directions
  • Include limitations

26
Sample Discussion Slide
  • Businessperson is a subgroup of White, and a
    subtype of Black and Latino Supported
  • Data supported the hypothesis that welfare
    recipient is a subtype of White, and a subgroup
    of Black and Latino Supported
  • High levels of prejudice will accompany attitudes
    that support the subgroup/subtype relationships
    Not Supported
  • Low levels of privilege awareness will accompany
    attitudes that support the subgroup/subtype
    relationships Not Supported

27
Contents References
  • Here are citations for the key articles used for
    this project.
  • Limit to introduction
  • Compact, compact, compact

28
Graphs, Figures, Images
  • Good for clarification
  • Keep simple
  • Use as needed
  • Neat and attractive
  • Be prepared to explain and elaborate
  • Use gridlines sparingly they almost never
    enhance the figure

29
Sample Bad Graph/Chart
30
Sample Good Graph/Chart
First Quarter
Second Quarter
Third Quarter
Fourth Quarter
31
Visual Appeal
  • Really, Visual Appeal?
  • Text Size Crowding
  • Slide Theme Background
  • Using Color
  • Uniformity

32
Text Size Crowding
  • At least 20-point font
  • Simple fonts better for everyone
  • Leave margins
  • White Space
  • Simple is GOOD

33
Sample Bad Font Slide
  • If you have to lean forward and squint from only
    five feet away, the font is too small!
  • Freehand fonts are not appreciated in a
  • professional presentation.
  • Artsy fonts are not
  • appropriate either.
  • Shouldnt there be space between letters?

34
Sample Good Font Slide
  • Times New Roman is the most common.
  • Arial is also very common.
  • Some people prefer Courier.
  • Tahoma is clean but subtly different.
  • Narkism isnt too bad.

35
Slide Theme Backgrounds
  • Simple is good
  • Too much pattern makes font hard to read
  • If like busy pattern, give textbox solid
    background
  • Contrast text color with background
  • Create your own color scheme

36
Sample Bad Background Slide
37
Sample Better Background Slide
38
Using Color
  • Too much color is distracting
  • Limit text colors to one or two
  • High-contrast colors into graphs figures

39
Uniformity
  • Format all slides the same
  • Do not mix-n-match fonts and backgrounds
  • Presentations should not be eclectic.

40
Graphics Illustrations
  • Relevant material only
  • Use conservatively
  • Nothing controversial unless related
  • Better to avoid

41
Sample Bad Graphics Slide
42
Hints Shortcuts
  • Complete sentences not required
  • If you wrote the paper, use it
  • Do it rough, then fix it

43
You, the Presenter
  • Mannerisms
  • Language
  • Knowledge
  • Aware of Audience

44
Poster Presentations
  • Similar to oral presentations
  • Complete sentences often better
  • Completely self-explanatory
  • All other rules are the same!!!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com