Title: Presentation skills development
 1Presentation skills development
- This will be tailored to a chemistry theme, but 
 much of this material applies to any talk you
 give, scientific or not.
- First rule of sortsdecide what you want your 
 audience to actually learn.
- At the end of your talk what should the take home 
 message really be?
2Take home lesson 
- Once you have determined what that take home 
 message isremember this, tell them THREE times
 what that is
- Tell them what your GOING to tell them 
- Tell them 
- Tell them what youve TOLD them 
- Dont make the mistake of hiding the focus of 
 your talkbuilding to some crescendo, that
 doesnt often work well (it does in some
 instances, but not at this stage)
3How to organize a typical talk
- This leads into HOW to organize your talk 
- Right after your title slide the order of your 
 talk should look something like this (call it an
 outline
- Introduction/Background material 
- Your groups work/previous results 
- Your approach (the tell em what youre gonna 
 say)
- Results (tell em) 
- Conclusions/Future directions (tell em what you 
 told em
- Acknowledgments (can omit here, but youd better 
 have this section in your talk)
4Whats on Tap
A sample outline
-  Background information 
-  Group approach 
-  Coordination Chemistry 
-  Additional Directions
5Background material
- Give a general background (a WHY AM I DOING this 
 research). This is a key element of any talkif
 you dont say WHY youre doing this, why should
 they listen?
- Include the work of other authors in the field, 
 not just your own group efforts (if yours is the
 only group doing this type of research, the first
 point is ALL the more critical to address.
6Background Continued
- Make sure to cite the appropriate articles if you 
 are discussing research from other groups
 (demonstrates youve done your homework too)
- Can be noted in almost fine print at the bottom 
 of a page
- Make sure its the most up-to-date lead 
 references
- Doesnt need to be included for group work 
 (unless you want to include it)
7Your Approach
- Here, you need to identify where the current 
 research is lacking (again, the focus on WHY
 youre doing what youre doing).
- Outline (briefly) what youre going to do, and 
 how you plan to do that.
- Focus on the benefits of what youre doing, how 
 it will advance your area of research (often,
 this is obvious, but not always)
8Your Results
- Once youve outlined your research direction, you 
 can begin to discuss your results.
- Note that the amount of time you spend getting 
 here is between 20-40 of your talk
- In a 20 minute talk (18 minutes to talk/2 minute 
 QA), you need about 4-8 minutes worth of
 background material, 40-60 ...7-10 minutes worth
 of your results, with the balance of your time
 going for your title slide, outline, conclusions
 and acknowledgements2-4 minutes
9Conclusions/Future/Acknowledgements 
- Always give credit where its due 
- Financial sponsors 
- Advisor 
- Other students graduate/u-grads/postdocs 
- Conclusionstell them what youve told them (last 
 chance to get your message across
- Futureif you have other plans for your research 
 (often the case), outline what you plan to do in
 the future
10Common mistakes made
- Most common mistake is making a slide too busy. 
 Keep things simple, one reaction (2 at most).
 Bigger font, so everyone can see
- Heres an example that sort of outlines this, 
 Ive crammed two slides into one.
11Straightforward reaction, alkane solvent
Establish electronic influence of ligand
Not everything went according to the plan
Already reported compound Though reported as an 
oil Using alkane solvent yielded x-ray suitable 
crystals Submitted to Acta Cryst 
 12Complete sentences
- Too often, using complete sentences is 
 unnecessary and distracting. Tend to read
 slide (more on that in a minute)
- Bullet points should normally be less than one 
 line longand can be sentence fragments.
- Fragments mean you need to complete the thought, 
 so your audience listens to you
13Dont READ your talk
- Most severe errordont read your talk word for 
 word right from the screen (sort of like what Im
 doing now). Your audience is literate, and can
 do that themselves.
- Often used as a crutch by first timers avoid 
 this pitfall
14Graphics
- Using graphics helps eliminate the need for 
 writing sentences, since graphics take up a lot
 of panel space
- 1 or 2 graphics per page is good rule of thumb 
- Use ppt animation if you like, thats a style 
 preference
15Multiple Substitution
-Additional thermolysis yields disubstituted 
product 
Peters, Baughman, Golynskiy Acta Cryst. E. 
2002, 58, 70-71 
 16Voice patterns/inflections
- Dont drone onusing same tone. Monotone voice  
 monotonous talk
- Vary speed, pitch, inflectionsjust like you 
 often do during normal conversations. Acting as
 though youre uninterested (via monotone) tunes
 your audience out too.
17Avoid the Awkward Turtle
- Several awkward momentshow to avoid 
- At your Introhow do you get into things? 
- Title? Was it read? Can your audience read? 
- Have an alternative title a second way to 
 describe your talk.
- Thank the one who introduced you 
- Dont worry about telling people your name. They 
 can read.
- Just get started in professional manner 
18Towards the endwrapping up
- Also one of the more awkward moments in a talk. 
- Find a smooth way to wrap upleaves a really good 
 overall impression.
- Two sections as you conclude your talk 
- Acknowledgements 
- The actual finish 
19Acknowledgements
- IN this section, youll need a segue line. 
- No journey in lab is solomany people worked on 
 this beforeor many have helped me or supported
 me
- No research completed in solitudeI have many 
 people that have helped along the way
- Then name those people, giving their 
 contributions if necessary
20The grand finale
- Once youve acknowledged everyoneits time to 
 finish your talk. Something like this works
 well.
- and I would also like to thank you for your 
 attention and I would be happy to answer any
 questions you may have.
- The audience now knows to applaud
21Local KnowledgeKings  Miz
- CHM 391--PresentationKings or Misericordia 
- Kings 
- Long room with a low hanging screen. 
- Audience strains to see things at the bottom 
- Make things top heavy leave the bottom 3rd blank 
- Smaller Title font to accomodate 
- Dark in the front, well-lit in the back 
- Means dark backgrounds look terrible 
- High contrast background/font colors
22Misericordia University
- Presentation room in their Library. 
- Room is enormousyou can hear echos! 
- Room stays uniformly well lit. 
- Dark backgrounds ok 
- Keep material relatively centered on page