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How to Give a Talk

How to Give a Talk. Why Listen?. People fear public speaking You will speak for class, work, thesis defense Another skill to learn Enjoy! “Why me?” -- A victim of dismal talks. Main Messages. Giving a talk is like ... Know your audience Start with message audience will receive

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How to Give a Talk

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  1. How to Give a Talk

  2. Why Listen? • People fear public speaking • You will speak • for class, work, thesis defense • Another skill to learn • Enjoy! • “Why me?” -- A victim of dismal talks

  3. Main Messages • Giving a talk is like ... • Know your audience • Start with message audience will receive • Prepare a topic tree • Know common mistakes

  4. Giving a Talk is Like ... • Stuff you already know… planning, program design, writing, teaching, learning … • Can read books • “Preparing Instructional Objectives” by Mager • “Handbook of Technical Writing” by Brusaw • “The Elements of Style” by Strunk and White • ... • But you need skills

  5. Know Your Audience • What do they know/believe? • talk at the right level • use the right means • They will be mixed • so deal with it! • Interest • inform • persuade -- change • expose a structure

  6. Focus on Them Receiving Messages

  7. Messages!!! • You must have messages • They are the destination • A few, not many • plan supporting sub-messages • Do not plan outward from you, but backward from them

  8. Messages • “I have too little to say” • Bah • Not so • “I don’t have enough time” • So, change your messages • Point to other resources • “… then I did this and then I did that…” • Is your chronology important?

  9. Topic Tree • Like program design • Display it any way that works • Depth depends on audience • don’t preach to the choir • Practice!! • How long will it take? • Prune • Remove deadly details, keep good examples [major limb pruned here]

  10. Topic Order • State messages early • So not a mystery to audience • Decide precedence aftercontent • Many paths to success, order may not matter • Depth first vs. Breadth first • Talk’s order is not necessarily the order of planning the talk!

  11. Avoiding Misstakes (Outline) (proff read) • Timing • Tension • Tedium • Techniques

  12. Common Mistake - Timing • Prune during timed practice • “cram” implies you aren’t focusing on them • Be aware of time • Too much intro!! • Plan for disaster • “eeek” doesn’t impress • If behind, don’t talk faster • they cannot listen faster

  13. Common Mistake - Timing • Set a pace for them not you • First few minutes • why should they listen? • why should they believe you? • Finish • impress main messages • don’t gasp or get tossed off the stage

  14. Common Mistake - Tension • The audience is on your side • they want you to succeed • look at them during the talk • Butterflies are normal and good • Plan, prune and practice so you can relax • Messages • Focus on audience not you

  15. Common Mistake - Tedium • Are you enjoying it? • Are you interested in them? • Occasional witticism is good • A cartoon ... • Monotone!!! • Interact with them • Messages are the key!

  16. Techniques • Speed bumps • Don’t kill interest with detail • Judging the “level” is the hard part • No preemptive apology • Talk tool - Powerpoint

  17. Slides • Informs them and focuses you • Useslides • Support messages, say why there • Not “busy” • Size • Don’t write what you will say • Transitions • Physical movement of slides • Know what you will say

  18. Good terse phrases bullets highlight key points graphs pictures Bad verbose compound sentences paragraphs unlabelled graphs tables of numbers Slides • Revise, revise, revise!

  19. Slides • Complex figures are ok • spend time • describe axes, then trendlines, then results • point to spots • Tell them what to get from the figure!

  20. Summary • Messages • Audience • Backwards • Topic Tree • Plan, prune, practice • Enjoy

  21. Project 3 (1 of 3) • 15 minutes total • Plan on 12 minutes of material • Time for questions/shuffling • About 1½ - 2 minutes per slide on average • Some faster, some slower • Practice for flow and timing • Out loud • You can think faster than you can talk • You can do about 3 full practices in an hour! • It will make a big difference

  22. Project 3 (2 of 3) • 1 major message per slide • e.g., don't combine intuition, motivation problem and solution all in one • Be consistent with titles to help audience • "Motivation" should not talk about methods • "My algorithm“ should not summarize related work • Your talk as advertisement • Not all the details of what you did • But give flavor or highlight difficulties

  23. Project 3 (3 of 3) • Start from high level and then go into detail • Tell people exactly what you are trying to say • Audience - level of class similar to yours • Graduate level CS students • Some experience in multimedia • May not know details on your problem, tho • Have fun! • If you enjoy your work, audience will, too

  24. Project 3 – Possible Structure • Title 1 slide • What is the problem 1 slide • Motivation/Importance 1 slide • What is the solution/contribution 1 slide • (Background/Definitions/Previous Work 1 slide • Approach/Work/Implementation 1-3 slides • Experiment design 1 slide • Results 1-3 slides • Conclusions and Future work 1 slide (See Project 3 Presentation Guide online)

  25. How to Give a Talk

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