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Effective Oral Presentations. Dr. George Marquis Composition and Rhetoric AUC. The Golden Rule of Success. The Week Before...Practice, Practice. How Your Audience Judges You. Knowledge Preparation Appearance. Dress to Impress.
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Effective Oral Presentations Dr. George Marquis Composition and Rhetoric AUC
How Your Audience Judges You.. • Knowledge • Preparation • Appearance
Dress to Impress • Clothes must not distract from your message. No words or logos on clothes. • Keep clothing neutral: black, white, gray, navy, beige, brown (no pink, purple, orange, etc.) • If you wear make up, wear only matte. • Don’t wear jewelry that moves or makes noise.
Dress for Success : (professional appearance) Photo: George Marquis, 2007
Dress for Success (professional appearance) Photo: George Marquis, 2007
Dress for Success (“Get down to work” look) Photo: George Marquis, 2007
Be proactive not reactive • Arrive at least 10 minutes ahead of your presentation. • Try to find the person who is setting up the equipment. • You can usually find the numbers for media service on the console. • ‘Amm Khalid is in charge of Falaki. • If you can’t find Khalid, call the main number – 5072.
Be proactive not reactive • Determine whether your equipment works by touch or by mouse. • If you’re bringing your own laptop , locate power source. • Connect laptop with the guest cable and press ctrl+ F4. • For sound, find the audio cable , plug it in and test it. There is a volume adjuster on the control panel.
Be proactive not reactive • If you design a presentation that has online links requiring a live internet connection, never assume that there will be one. Always find out well ahead of time. If there isn’t one, download what you need in advance.
Working With A Screen • Stand to left of screen and at a 45 degree angle to screen and audience. • When you want to emphasize a point, turn to face the audience. • Avoid path of light from data show projector. • Plan how to change slides. (Two options)
Pointers • If your slides are simple you will not need one. • For complex slides, use a laser or conventional pointer. A laser pointer is preferable because it is smaller and therefore doesn’t disturb the audience if you wave it accidentally. • Be very careful not to point the laser beam at audience.
Example of simple slide (no pointer needed) Objectives, Goals & Results • Community awareness developed • Job opportunities created in this field Objectives GoalsResults
Complex (Use pointer) IntroductionProposed solution Previous attempts Why ours?
Hand Gestures • Keep them simple and natural. • Searching for words can cause you to use your hands more. Practice what you want to say to avoid this. • Don’t “reach” to the screen with your hands. Use a pointer.
Audience Awareness Source: http://static.kdenews.org/dannya/akademy_edu_audience.jpg
Organizational Skills • Have an agenda • It adds a psychological advantage • Use signposts • First, I’d like to discuss.. • Now, my colleague, Ahmed, will introduce..
Agenda • Problem Solution Statement • Objectives, Goals & Results • Methodology • Timeline • Budget • Roles & Responsibilities
Organizational Skills (cont.) • Start on time • Plan for at least 1 minute per slide • Know what and what not to emphasize
Delivery • Pace yourself and your team • 100 words a minute is the most effective rate of delivery
Delivery (cont.) • Eye Contact • Look at your audience when you are speaking. Pick two or three points in the room and direct your speech at them. • Look directly above the eye level of your audience if you are uncomfortable looking directly at people.
Be prepared • No hesitation – have the words you need on hand • No fillers
Avoid slang and colloquialisms • This is an academic setting, not comedy central. • The audience might be amused, but not impressed or persuaded.
Source: www.cybergeo.eu Jargon
Jargon • Expected if your audience is from the same field and specialized • If not, you need to adapt your language to their level of comprehension • No one is impressed by your ability to talk over their heads
Team Skills • Maintain good rapport • Refer to your team members as colleagues • Hand off to them when you’re finished • Refer back to what they said when you’re talking.
Slides • Follow the 6 x 6 rule: • No more than three fonts • Make titles a contrasting color • Minimum font size is 24 point • Source your information
Fonts • Use sans serif (Calibri, Arial, Helvetica)
Calibri Font • In a survey conducted by researchers at Wichita State University, Calibri was the most popular font for e-mail, instant messaging and PowerPoint presentations. • Source: http://psychology.wichita.edu/surl/usabilitynews/91/POF.html
The Step-back Rule • “When you are finished [designing] your presentation, step back about 5-6 feet from your slides on a 17” monitor. If you can read the lines clearly your presentation text is large enough for the audience to read.” Source: http://www.ispn-psych.org/docs/06tips4ppt.pdf
Animation • Animation in your engineering diagrams is fine. • But to move text, use animation only sparingly. • Do not use sound to move signal the beginning or end of a slide. It will make your presentation seem less than serious.
Figures (Charts, etc.) • Minimize text when using figures • Use text only for labeling
Choose the type of visual carefully • The next slide illustrates the greater clarity of the bar charts.
Citing Sources • There are two types of citation in oral presentations: • Oral Citations • See: www.lib.jmu.edu/gold/citingspeech.doc • Slide Citations • cite sources for any direct quotations or images appearing on a PowerPoint slide. Write the information in a small font in a textbox at the bottom of the slide or under the image.
To Cite Photos, Graphs, etc. • In PowerPoint, go to “home.” • Then click on “layout” in the “slides” section. • There are two options for slides with captions: • Content with caption • Picture with caption ****** Caution: using these formats sometimes cuts off the top of the picture
Picture correctly cited (see below picture in slide) Source: http://www.lib.jmu.edu/gold/mod7ethics.htm
Photo correctly cited. Source: www.abcnews.com/sections/us/global106/index.html
Citing Sources (cont.) • Cite graphics or photos from the Internet, unless they are in the public domain. • You can add a bibliography or works cited slide at the end of your presentation, but you still need to cite orally and textually in the presentation. • Source: http://www.lib.jmu.edu/gold/mod7ethics.htm
Credits • Clip Art. Slides 2,3,9,13,16,48. MS Office PowerPoint 2007. • Slides 4,5,6. Marquis. G., RHET 321. American University in Cairo, Fall 2007. • Slides 18,19. Baghdadi, K., Fahmy, B., Mostafa, N., RHET 321, American University in Cairo, Fall 2007 • Slide 21. http://static.kdenews.org/dannya/akademy_edu_audience.jpg. Retrieved March 2008. • Slide 29. www.cybergeo.eu. Retrieved Feb 2008.
Credits • Slide 36. http://psychology.wichita.edu/surl/usabilitynews /91/POF.html. Retrieved Feb 2008. • Slide 37. http://www.ispn-psych.org/docs/06tips4ppt.pdf . Retrieved Jan 2008. • Slide 41. www.enterprise-dashboard.com. Retrieved Mar 2007. • Slides 45, 47. http://www.lib.jmu.edu/gold/mod7ethics.htm. Retrieved Feb 2008. • Slide 46.www.abcnews.com/sections/us/global106/ index.html. Retrieved Feb. 2008.