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Effective Oral Presentations

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

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  1. Effective Oral Presentations Dr. George Marquis Composition and Rhetoric AUC

  2. The Golden Rule of Success..

  3. The Week Before...Practice, Practice.

  4. How Your Audience Judges You.. • Knowledge • Preparation • Appearance

  5. 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.

  6. Dress for Success : (professional appearance) Photo: George Marquis, 2007

  7. Dress for Success (professional appearance) Photo: George Marquis, 2007

  8. Dress for Success (“Get down to work” look) Photo: George Marquis, 2007

  9. Preparing for Any Eventuality

  10. 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.

  11. 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.

  12. 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.

  13. Time to begin?

  14. Room Skills

  15. 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)

  16. Referring to Screen

  17. 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.

  18. Example of simple slide (no pointer needed) Objectives, Goals & Results • Community awareness developed • Job opportunities created in this field Objectives GoalsResults

  19. Complex (Use pointer) IntroductionProposed solution Previous attempts Why ours?

  20. 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.

  21. Audience Awareness Source: http://static.kdenews.org/dannya/akademy_edu_audience.jpg

  22. Organizational Skills • Have an agenda • It adds a psychological advantage • Use signposts • First, I’d like to discuss.. • Now, my colleague, Ahmed, will introduce..

  23. Agenda • Problem Solution Statement • Objectives, Goals & Results • Methodology • Timeline • Budget • Roles & Responsibilities

  24. Organizational Skills (cont.) • Start on time • Plan for at least 1 minute per slide • Know what and what not to emphasize

  25. Delivery • Pace yourself and your team • 100 words a minute is the most effective rate of delivery

  26. 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.

  27. Language

  28. Be prepared • No hesitation – have the words you need on hand • No fillers

  29. Slang

  30. Avoid slang and colloquialisms • This is an academic setting, not comedy central. • The audience might be amused, but not impressed or persuaded.

  31. Source: www.cybergeo.eu Jargon

  32. 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

  33. 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.

  34. 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

  35. Fonts • Use sans serif (Calibri, Arial, Helvetica)

  36. 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

  37. 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

  38. 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.

  39. Figures (Charts, etc.) • Minimize text when using figures • Use text only for labeling

  40. A very busy chart

  41. Choose the type of visual carefully • The next slide illustrates the greater clarity of the bar charts.

  42. Pie Charts vs. Bar Charts

  43. 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. 

  44. 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

  45. Picture correctly cited (see below picture in slide) Source: http://www.lib.jmu.edu/gold/mod7ethics.htm

  46. Photo correctly cited.   Source: www.abcnews.com/sections/us/global106/index.html

  47. 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

  48. Thank You

  49. 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.

  50. 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.

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