NTHU College of Engineering - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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NTHU College of Engineering

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Tips for Giving Presentations in English Johanna E. Katchen ( ) National Tsing Hua University ( ) katchen_at_mx.nthu.edu.tw – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: NTHU College of Engineering


1
Tips for Giving Presentations in English
  • Johanna E. Katchen (???)National Tsing Hua
    University
  • (?????????)katchen_at_mx.nthu.edu.tw
  • http//mx.nthu.edu.tw/katchen/

2
Who Am I?
  • At NTHU for 20 years
  • Taught public speaking course (Oral Practice II)
    for 17 years, wrote a textbook for it
  • Have given many presentations at international
    conferences over Asia and Europe (e.g., Thailand,
    Russia, France, Brazil)

3
What will we talk about today?
  • Kind of conference and presentation, expected
    presentation behavior
  • Preparing the physical presentation
  • Hardware and software considerations
  • Preparing yourself

4
Observe Others
  • Attend conferences as a participant to learn
    about developments in your field
  • Also observe and analyze how other people give
    papers
  • If there is a time slot when none of the topics
    is of interest to you, go and observe HOW
  • Did you see a good presentation? What made it
    good? What made a bad one bad? How could it be
    improved?

5
Kinds of Presentations
  • Learn about the different kinds of presentations
  • First-time presenters may give posters or joint
    papers with their professors your professor can
    guide you and field hard questions from the
    audience
  • Plenary speakers and colloquia speakers are
    usually more famous ones

6
Kinds of Speaking Opportunities
  • Learn about the conference/event
  • Some conferences may be more formal than others
  • Some may expect a different type of presentation
    or demonstration
  • Explaining your research to colleagues and
    students at another university is not the same as
    giving a conference paper
  • Teaching a class is different

7
  • How much time do you have to speak?
  • If you are part of a group, what is the order,
    the transitions?
  • Who are your audience? How much do they know
    about what you are talking about? How much
    background do you have to give them?

8
To Read or Not To Read?
  • Are you going to read your paper word by word?
    THIS IS BORING!
  • Why do you want to read? Because you are afraid
    you will get lost in English.
  • In some fields, reading the paper is the custom,
    in others reading is forbidden.

9
  • Will the people attending your talk have your
    word-by-word paper in their hands?
  • Is it on paper or CD? (read along while you talk
    or later?)
  • So why should they bother to come and hear you
    mumble? Why not stay home and read it at their
    leisure? If they have questions they can send
    you an e-mail.

10
Power Point Considerations
  • Many fields use Power Point for presentations now
    except for some traditional ones where people are
    computer-phobic
  • You can still readeither from the main points on
    the screen (confident in English) or word-by-word
    notes you make for yourself (not so confident)

11
Use of Language
  • Put up main points, not details
  • Dont write full sentences if you dont have to
    KISS PrincipleKeep It Simple, Stupid!
  • Use mostly content wordsnouns, verbs, adjectives
  • Keep the structures parallel on the same slide
    (notice Ive started with verbs on this one)

12
  • If youre worried about your grammar, then using
    content words is useful for you
  • If your pronunciation isnt clear, then you can
    point to key words on the screen as you say them,
    and your audience will understand you
  • Your audience may be mostly nonnative speakers!

13
FormattingFont Size
  • Can the audience read your slides? The default
    32 point is set for a reason. Dont go below 28
    point. 28 point will probably be legible from
    the back of the room.
  • This is 24 point
  • This is 20 point
  • This is 18 point

14
  • This example cannot be read by your audience!
    Its too small and theres too much text
  • Linguistics, EFL, and e-Learning Bringing Them
    Together
  • Teaching linguistics in EFL contexts presents
    specific challenges. Students are required to
    learn new content in a language they do not fully
    master. Thus they may face difficulties with
    content and language at the same time and may
    find the content opaque due to inadequate
    language skills. E-learning may provide a means
    to reinforce students learning by providing
    review materials in a somewhat different format
    from the in-class lecture.
  • This paper focuses on the delivery of three
    linguistics courses taught in English for Chinese
    students majoring in English at a Taiwan
    university. Introduction to English is a
    required course in the first semester with 60
    70 students. Students receive three hours of
    face-to-face lectures each week, delivered in
    English by a native speaker, but they review
    material and take practice quizzes on-line using
    the universitys e-learning platform. History of
    the English Language is required for a
    linguistics concentration while its diachronic
    nature necessitates more written materials, audio
    and video files are available on-line for review.
    Varieties of English is elective, and audio and
    video clips of English as it is spoken worldwide
    form the bulk of the teaching materials.
  • The purpose of this session is to illustrate how
    ordinary teachers can go beyond the presentation
    of text and develop more exciting on-line
    materials to bolster students motivation for
    learning linguistic content. The presenter will
    also discuss the feedback collected from students
    at the end of each course in the form of
    questionnaires.

15
FormattingFont Style
  • Power Points default is Arial
  • Arial is sans serifwithout the little feet
  • Sans serif is good for headlines, titles, calling
    attention
  • Serif has the little feet its good for long
    pieces of text like novels and journal articles
  • This is Times New Roman, a common serif font

16
FormattingSlide Design
  • Power Point provides many styles dont use one
    that is too busy, that interferes with your
    content, that distracts the audience
  • Use dark print on light background or light print
    on a dark background
  • If you have charts and graphs, dark on a light
    background is probably better for the audience

17
  • Dont put too much material on one slide
  • Dont put material too close to the bottom of the
    slideviewers in the back may have trouble seeing
    it over other heads
  • Will you include any clip art? Is it appropriate
    for the level of formality of the conference?
  • For timing, consider roughly 1 2 minutes per
    slide

18
Flash Disk or Notebook?
  • Within Taiwan, flash disk is probably okay
  • Make sure any embedded files are in the same
    folder on your disk
  • Other countries are not as advanced
    technologically as Taiwanincluding the USA.
    Will the computer support USB2? Does it have
    Windows XP or an older OS?

19
  • Will you panic if all the Power Point commands
    are in English?
  • What kind of software are you using? If it is
    not too common, better take your own notebook
  • Most recent LCD projectors are compatible with
    most notebook brands (Ive had no trouble in
    Russia, Thailand, USA with Sony/Acer, but did at
    Yuanpei with my new Acer)

20
  • NOTE While your notebook adaptor can handle any
    type of electrical current, the shape of the plug
    is different in other countries. USA is the same
    as Taiwan, but Europe and even Southeast Asia are
    different. Find out about the electricity and
    plug shape, buy this cheap device and be
    prepared.
  • To look professional, invest in a mouse pointer.

21
Content and Organization
  • When you spend the whole day at a conference, how
    much do you remember at the end of the day?
  • You are the master of your own content, but how
    much will you present? Again, keep it simple,
    give them whats new and significant.
  • They can read the details in the full paper,
    appendices, on your website.

22
  • While each field and conference has its
    preferences, think generally IMRD
  • In your introduction, frame your problem as it
    relates to previous and ongoing research cite
    only directly relevant previous research
  • Give important points of your research
    procedure/methodology
  • Give only the relevant results
  • Tell in the discussion section what the results
    mean and draw conclusions

23
  • TO SUMMARIZE IMRD
  • What is the question and why did I bother about
    it?
  • What did I do?
  • What did I find?
  • What does it mean?
  • Where do we go from here?

24
What Should I Wear?
  • Young menat least a button-down shirt tucked
    into your trousers
  • Different conferences have different levels of
    formality
  • Will there be other events? cocktail party?
    banquet? job interview?
  • Take your suit jacket and tie just in case its
    always safer to be dressed well than to be
    considered sloppy
  • A little more complex for women

25
Practice, Practice, Practice
  • Youve prepared your content, written out your
    notes, and formatted your slides. Now you have
    to practice.
  • Say your talk aloud and time itmodify
    accordingly.
  • Give your talk to some trusted colleagues and ask
    them to criticize and to ask hard questions.

26
  • Give your talk in a room with the
    computer/projector set up and have a
    colleague videotape you.
  • Watch the video and change what you dont like.
    Videotape a second time to see whether you have
    improved.
  • Dont worry about gestures. More practice leads
    to more confidence leads to more natural gestures.

27
During the Talk
  • Try to remain calm. It will be over after a few
    minutes and you will still be alive. No one will
    throw eggs or tomatoes at you, though they may
    throw some hard questions.
  • Try to look in the direction of the audience at
    least some of the time.
  • Speak clearly and confidently. Dont mumble.
  • Dont stand in front of the screen.
  • Use a pointer.

28
Many native speakers of a language give poor
presentations.Many nonnative speakers give
excellent presentations.
  • You cant improve language skills rapidly, but
    you can improve presentation skills with practice.

29
Slides from this presentation have been posted at
http//mx.nthu.edu.tw/katchen
  • Thank you!
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