Multimedia Oral Presentation on One Compelling Aspect of the Research Project
Everyone is looking forward to hearing about and seeing some of what you discovered in your research!
DATES AND TIMEFRAMES FOR PRESENTATIONS
Each student will give a multimedia oral presentation during the final week of class. Whether your presentation will be scheduled for Tuesday, December 2 or Thursday, December 4 we'll determine by drawing lots.
Eeach student will have a total of only 12 minutes. Your actual presentation may run no fewer than 8 and no more than 9 minutes; allow the rest of your time for questions from your audience. Rehearse your timing very carefully! I will be ruthless about cutting your presentation off at 9 minutes!
Especially considering the limited amount of time each student is alloted to present and the number of presentations we will have, it is absolutely essential that you be completely ready to go when your turn comes. This means not only being prepared to speak; it also means being confident that the technological aspects of your presentation are up and ready. Time that you take in class getting your powerpoint presentation up and running, for example, will be deducted from your total presentation time.
Tuesday, December 2
Pat
Daniel
Saana
Albert
Ryan
Christopher
Christina
Fred
Thursday, December 4
David
Radhika
Spring
Dani
Rahul
Logan
Jay
Focus your presentation on one specific aspect of your research paper topic and/or your experience as a researcher that has been particularly interesting, compelling, disturbing... that stands out for you. You will not have time in this brief presentation to cover your entire research topic or your entire experience, so don't try! Choose one aspect, and plan to make no more than three major points about it.
Plan to use at least one form of visual or audio media to support your presentation effectively. PowerPoint slides themselves count as one of these sources, although you may want to add and combine other relevant media -- for example, internet hyperlinks, or audio or video files or sources.
To ensure the effective use of multimedia in your presentation, I'd suggest two things in addition to rehearsing your content, oral style, and timing carefully in advance:
First, have your powerpoint presentation mounted in advance. This can be accomplished in one of several ways:
From our classroom, upload it from floppy disc or CD to the Everyone Folder before your presentation day or well before class begins on your presentation day;
Send it to yourself via email attachment and download it to the Everyone Folder prior to your presentation day or well before class begins on your presentation day; or
Store it on your leland space and download it to the Everyone Folder prior to your presentation day or well before class begins on your presentation day.
Second, make sure that the teachnological aspects of your presentation (for example audio or visual adjuncts) work smoothly in the classroom (so as not to discover any glitches in the middle of your actual presentation!). This can be accomplished by testing it during the following times:
Tuesday December 2 in our classroom, between 12:50 and 1:30 p.m.; or
Tuesday, December 2, OR Thursday, December 4, in our classrrom, just prior to class, between 10:50 and 11:00, or just after class, between 12:50 and 1:00
The Multimedia Studio on the second floor of Meyer Library can porvide you with both equipment, software, and consultants to help you, if you need help, in developing multimedia projects, including this one. This might be especially useful if you want to try anything fancy, like incorporating audio or video into your presentation. Check online for this quarter's consultants' schedule.
The Speaking Center of the Center for Teaching and Learning provides students with coaching on oral presentations, services that are provided during specific hours, both at the Speaking Center, located on the fourth floor of Sweet Hall, and at the Stanford Writing Center, located in the basment of Margaret Jacks Hall, as well as at Green Library and in some residences. For coaching hours, appointments, and more information, check online.
Please check out Carolyn's Power Point Presentation on Oral Presentations for guidelines on conception, organization, writing, and delivery of oral presentations supported by multimedia. But beware! Although solid in content and advice, these PowerPoint sides feature the kinds of mistakes in design that are typical of first-timers users of PowerPoint! See if you can spot them! ; )
Please remember: I will ask you to submit this presentation (along with your reading presentation) on disk or CD, or in the form of print-outs of slides and notes, with your portfolio at the end of the quarter.