a presentation about presentations

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A presentation about presentations Mariana Kersh January 28, 2009 ME/BME 6XX

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A presentation about presentations. Mariana Kersh January 28, 2009 ME/BME 6XX. Overview. Introduction Methods Results Discussion Summary. Topics to be covered. The slides General content and layout Presenting data Formatting The presentation itself Speaking Handling mishaps. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A presentation about presentations

A presentation about

presentations

Mariana KershJanuary 28, 2009

ME/BME 6XX

Page 2: A presentation about presentations

Overview

• Introduction• Methods• Results• Discussion• Summary

Page 3: A presentation about presentations

Topics to be covered

• The slides– General content and layout– Presenting data– Formatting

• The presentation itself– Speaking– Handling mishaps

Page 4: A presentation about presentations

Layout and content

• Learn the tools• Use the 1 minute/slide rule• Modify the default/master slide

– Nothing important too low• Consider a status bar

4/XXLayout SpeakingFormatData Mishaps

Page 5: A presentation about presentations

Layout and content

• Learn the tools• Use the 1 minute/slide rule• Modify the default/master slide• Consider a status bar• Introduce content as needed

– Animation use sparingly• Keep it simple

– Less words/equations– More pictures/symbols

Page 6: A presentation about presentations

Formatting• Be consistent

– Avoid changing layout, fonts, animation styles• Font

– Stand 6 feet back from monitor and check the size– Use sans-serif fonts (Arial or Helvetica)

• Use high contrast colors– avoid gradient backgrounds

• Include a thank you/questions/blank slide at the end

Page 7: A presentation about presentations

…then 1-3 succinct “take-home messages” / conclusions from the slide here see the difference in the next two slides…

…clean graphics here…

Presenting data: Use a descriptive title here…

Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 8: A presentation about presentations

Data, continued

The below shows some data we recorded in our laboratory on 11/17/2003. The engine is operating at an equivalence ratio of 0.16. The humidity seen at early crank angle degrees is just the ambient humidity, then the water produced near -28 CAD aTDC and near -15 CAD aTDC represents water produced in combustion. These results represent an important step toward understanding low-temperature chemical reactions:

Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 9: A presentation about presentations

Measured evolution of H2O in a piston engine

Simulation under-predicts the H2O content in the engine

= 0.16

Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 10: A presentation about presentations

Don’t use legends…

Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 11: A presentation about presentations

… label curves directly!

viewer doesn’t have to spend time matching curves to the legend usually results in less wasted “white space” in plots Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 12: A presentation about presentations

… label curves directly!

viewer doesn’t have to spend time matching curves to the legend usually results in less wasted “white space” in plots Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 13: A presentation about presentations

Lots of numbers on plot axes are distracting…

Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 14: A presentation about presentations

… this is much better!

Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 15: A presentation about presentations

Avoid small plots or plots with small fonts

note that the right plot above has essentially the default setting in Microcal Origin, maybe OK for a document but unacceptable when projected

Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 16: A presentation about presentations

Manage the units on your plots

use a consistent convention beware of [m] x 10-9 consider [atm], [bar], [Pa] Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 17: A presentation about presentations

Avoid un-framed plots

figures require effort to change so try to get them correct the first time

Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 18: A presentation about presentations

-80 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 600

102030

500

1000

1500

2000

0.000.020.040.060.08

1330 1340 1350 1360 1370 1380

Pre

ssur

e [a

tm]

Crank Angle Degrees [aTDC]

Gas Properties

Tem

perature [K]

1330

1340

1350

1360

1370

1380

0.050.030

Wav

elen

gth

[nm

]

0

0.03

0.05

0.07

0.07

Spectrogram

Wavelength [nm]

Abs

orba

nce TDC

50o aTDCSpectra

conditions: uniform n-heptane / air charge, = 0.35, 600 rpm, optical engine gas spectra measured every 5 s = 0.09 CAD @ 600 rpm gas temperature history inferred from the spectrogram

What’s wrong with this slide?

Slide courtesy of Scott Sanders

Page 19: A presentation about presentations

The Presentation

• Slides = outline– Avoid reading the slides or your notes

• Speak slowly– Remember ~ 1 min/slide

• Make eye contact• Have confidence!

– “I don’t know” is an acceptable answer

Page 20: A presentation about presentations

Preventing mishaps• Keep the file size down

– Compress pictures, e.g.• Use the existing tools

– Draw arrows,boxes, etc. in PPT• Save as power point show (.pps)• Test it

– on another computer– on another operating system

http://www.microsoft.com/atwork/getworkdone/presentations.mspx

Page 21: A presentation about presentations

References/Tips• http://www.microsoft.com/atwork/getworkdo

ne/presentations.mspx– Use align/distribute tools– Use grids and guides to align and space objects

• http://www.pcworld.com/article/9084/powerpoint_layout_tips.html

– Use the alt key to align objects– You can make a perfect circle or square in

PowerPoint by selecting the appropriate tool, then holding down Shift while you draw the object. But what do you do if you've already made the drawing, and now you want to make it perfect? Select the object and hold down Ctrl while you double-click the corner sizing handles.

Page 22: A presentation about presentations

• http://cit.information.unl.edu/tips/ppt-creating.htm– All images must be inserted directly into

PowerPoint through the Insert > Picture command. If you use copy-and-paste to add an image, you may corrupt your file. The corruption may not be seen immediately.

– If you have two or more slides that will look very similar (same kind of graph but different data points, same table but different numbers, etc.), make one exactly how you want it to look. In the Slide Sorter view, select the slide and choose Edit > Duplicate from the menu. Next edit the new slide to change the information while the “look” remains the same.