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WCHRI Lunch & Learn
Creating and Delivering Powerful Scientific Presentations
Geoff Ball, PhD, RDProfessor, Dept of PediatricsAHS Chair in Obesity Researchgdball@ualberta.ca
Maryam Kebbe, PhDPostdoctoral Fellow, Dept of Pediatricskebbe@ualberta.ca
October 8th, 2019
Welcome to this WCHRI Lunch and Learn!
Remember to present your research at WCHRI Research Day if you received WCHRI support.
Remember to acknowledge the Foundations that supported you and/or your work.
ObjectivesAt the completion of this session, you will learn how to:
• Identify the appropriate sections of oral or poster presentations
• Understand and specifically target your presentation to your specific audience
• Identify tips for creating effective presentations• Identify strategies to improve your presentation
skills
Outline
• How to communicate with your audience
• How to prepare a poster or oral presentation
Design, content, and delivery
Why Present Your Research?
To share your research question, process, and outcomes
To highlight the importance and value of your work To engage with your academic peers To fulfill your commitment to knowledge translation
(your own, your supervisor, your funder)
Content: Standard Components
1. Title2. Introduction/rationale/purpose3. Methods4. Results5. Conclusions/future directions6. Acknowledgements/references (?)
1. Title2. Introduction/rationale/purpose3. Methods4. Results5. Conclusions/future directions6. Acknowledgements/references (?)
Content: Standard Components
Planning
• Set up the correct dimensions beforeyou start
• Layout: Institution template vs original
• Resolution: Printer vs screen
• Print: Send in advanceSUBPrint, VIVID Print
Font Style
• Use sans serif fonts instead of serifSans serif fonts: Arial, Helvetica, Calibri
• Avoid too much underlining
• Bold or italicize key words
• Left-align (vs fully justify) text
Colours
Layout:• No – dark background and light text• Yes – light background and dark text
• Avoid too many colours (2-3 max)
• Use colour wheels http://kuler.adobe.com
Plan ahead
• Set-up early, take down on time (for WCHRI, this will happen at lunch)
• Protect poster in canister• Print 8x11 copies of your poster
(for back-up and hand-outs)• Bring business cards
Communicate
Engage, educate, entertain• Know your stuff• Know your audience• Be clear and concise• Do your best to answer
questions; no one expects you to be perfect
Communicate some more• Avoid reading your poster
Explain context, problem, and the solution/your research
• Summaries – varying lengths
• Body languageFace audienceMake eye contactBe mindful of gestures
Design: Planning
• What story will you tell?• Practice, practice, practice• Seek feedback • Confirm logistics
Podium Pointer/Water/TimerPresenter View Audience (size, backgrounds)IT Support Introduction
Design: Presentation
• If ~10 minutes:Title/Intro/Purpose (2-3min)Methods/Results (5-6min)Conclusion/Future Directions (1-2min)
• How many slides? Less is more• Estimate 1 minute/slide
Design: Slides• PowerPoint, Prezi, etc. • Min. 20-24pt• Font Type:
Serif, Serif, SerifSans Serif, Sans Serif, Sans Serif
YES! Headings; smooth transitions; picture = 1,000 wordsNO! Sound effects; weird/variable transitions btwn slides
Full sentences; too much text or information
Delivery: Presentation
• Avoid reading your slides• Body language
- Face audience; make eye contact- Be mindful of gestures
Considerations
• Arrive early to set-up and plan• Start and finish on time
- Shows respect for audience and other speakers• Facilities and A/V connections• Dress to impress respect
1. Title Slide2. Declaration/Conflict of Interest 3. Background/Rationale4. Research Question/Purpose/Hypothesis5. Study Design6. Results7. Limitations8. Conclusion9. Future Directions10.Acknowledgements
Content: Standard Elements
1. Title Slide
• Title• Name(s)
- Affiliations, position, institution• Event and date• “Thank-you!”
- For introduction, invitation, being here• Make a good first impression
2. Declaration Slide / COI
• Ask if slide required • State competing interests, if any • Acknowledgements (?)
3. Background/Rationale
• Introduce topic• What is known/not known?• Why is it important to know?• Target content to the audience
- Experts? Generalists? Public?
4. Research Question/Hypothesis
• Identify question/hypothesis you will address
• Use one slide- Keep it clear and concise
5. Study Design
• Keep your audience in mind re: details• Keep it simple
- Prepare to discuss detailed procedures and limitations of design/methodology in Q & A
• Use figure or flow diagram
6. Results
• What will your audience want to know?• Ensure your results align with
question/purpose/hypothesis
7. Limitations
• Better to address than ignore • Shows integrity and humility• There is no perfect study
8. Conclusions
• Based on the results you presented• Link to your question/hypothesis • Provide context
- How do your results fit into the bigger picture?• 1 to 3 points max
9. Future Directions• What are next steps for you? Your lab?
- Where, why, and how?• What are logical/potential next steps
beyond your own work?
Final Words• Thank the audience for their attention
“Thank-you very much.”
• Invite questions (even if you don’t want to)“I’m happy to take questions if you have any.”
Acknowledgements
• Drs. Sarah Curtis and Chloe Joynt (Dept of Pediatrics, UAlberta)
• WCHRI team (Dr. Lorin Charlton)
WCHRI Research Day: Judging Posters & Talks
Outstanding Extremely strong with negligible weaknesses (90+)
Excellent Very strong with only some minor weaknesses (80-89)
Very Good Strong but with numerous minor weaknesses (70-79)
Good Strong but with at least one moderate weakness (60-69)
Satisfactory Some strengths but also moderate weaknesses (50-59)
Poor Some strengths but with at least one major weakness (<50)
1. Quality of research (originality/methods used and methodological rigor)2. Significance/relevance to the field/society in general3. Development of idea and clarity of purpose (stated hypothesis or question)4. Conclusions and future research directions5. Clear presentation/communication/responses to questions; enthusiasm for topic
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