1 / 25

Designing a Scientific Poster Maggie Dickinson Macaulay Instructional Technology Fellow

Designing a Scientific Poster Maggie Dickinson Macaulay Instructional Technology Fellow Queens College (With slides borrowed from fellow ITF’s Russell Hogg and Craig Willse ). Today’s Goals: Understand project expectations Learn the basics of poster design

skyla
Download Presentation

Designing a Scientific Poster Maggie Dickinson Macaulay Instructional Technology Fellow

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Designing a Scientific Poster Maggie Dickinson Macaulay Instructional Technology Fellow Queens College (With slides borrowed from fellow ITF’s Russell Hogg and Craig Willse)

  2. Today’s Goals: Understand project expectations Learn the basics of poster design Determine elements of successful poster design

  3. What’s a Scientific Poster, Anyway? Visual means for communicating research to an academic or professional community. It is a summary of research that serves to create interest by highlighting most important findings.

  4. Requirements • Each group must produce one poster. • Posters can be made with Keynote, PowerPoint or Illustrator. • Poster dimensions must be 48” x 36” (or vice versa).

  5. Due Dates • Poster presentations at Macaulay December 10th and 15th

  6. What makes a poster succeed?

  7. Communicating your ideaseffectively. The Pavlov Principle

  8. Design Matters: • Images should guide the overall layout, not the text. • Avoid cluttering the poster (graphs, photos, etc.). • Watch your color contrasts. • Make sure all components are aligned properly. • Use some kind of underlying structure!

  9. What makes a poster FAIL?

  10. Text : Less is More • Teeth & Life History • Incremental growth • Not remodeled • Resistant to environmental stress • Teeth are ideal for studying life history because they grow incrementally, are not remodeled during an individual’s lifetime, and are not highly subject to environmental stresses.

  11. How to Use Text: • Break text up with bullets or numbers. (Hint: This slide) • Indenting shows subordination • - Like this, see? • Avoid lengthy paragraphs that give far too much detail, like talking about why you did what you did and whether you dislike positivism because there is such a thing as reality out there and it operates in a certain way and we should be able to access that in some shape, form, or fashion and besides it’s all from some stuffy old dead guy thinking too hard, anyway.

  12. How to Use Text: • Make sure your font colors stand out against the background. • Use fonts people can read! • - Titles & headings should be 40 to 70 pt. • - Body text should never be less than 14 pt. • Be consistent with colors and use them to guide the reader. • - E.g., you could use one color for headings, another for body text.

  13. Templates for Poster Layout

  14. Left to Right, Top to Bottom Flow Title & Authors

  15. Left to Right Flow in Rows Title & Authors Part 1 Part 2 Part 3

  16. Centered Image & Peripheral Explanations Title & Authors

  17. Centered Explanation, Peripheral Images Title & Authors

  18. Sample Posters

  19. Resources for Poster Design • Apple tutorial for making a scientific poster: http://www.apple.com/science/productivitylab/#researchposter • “Advice on designing scientific posters” (Swarthmore College)  http://www.swarthmore.edu/NatSci/cpurrin1/posteradvice.htm“Do’s and Don’ts of Poster Presentation” • “Do’s and Don’ts of Poster Presentation” (The American Society for Cell Biology)  http://www.ascb.org/index.cfm?navid=112&id=1607&tcode=nws3 • “Creating Effective Poster Presentations” (North Carolina State University)  http://www.ncsu.edu/project/posters/NewSite/

More Related