Presentation Skills. Andrew Ker. Department of Computer Science, 5 May with thanks to Tom Melham, whose original slides inspired these

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Presentation Skills Andrew Ker Department of Computer Science, 5 May 2014 with thanks to Tom Melham, whose original slides inspired these

Presentation skills Strategies and tips for how to prepare and give a good presentation. We are thinking about various types of presentation: Academic seminars & conference presentations. Informal academic cakes talks. Industrial presentations. The undergraduate group project presentation.

Why does this matter? to academics: Conference talks & invited seminars are crucial to your scientific reputation. You can win collaborators and influence. Most academic jobs involve a talk in the selection process. Science only has value if communicated. to others: Your job security & promotion will depend on communication skills. You can win resources and influence. You need to communicate technical information to do your job.

Creating a talk There are seven steps to creating a successful talk. 1. Have something to say! 2. Identify your audience. 3. Determine the main message. What is the one thing you most want them to remember? 4. Decide on the broad structure. Find a story to tell. 5. Prepare visual aids. 6. Practice. Make sure that you will not go over time. 7. Check the venue.

Have something to say The first rule of style is to have something to say. The second rule of style is to control yourself when, by chance, you have two things to say; say the first one, then the other, not both at the same time. George Pólya

Audience & main message Whom are you talking to? Fellow academics? Academic colleagues in a different field? The man in the street? A prospective partner or employer? How much technical knowledge can you assume? What examples will they be familiar with? What will capture their interest? Why are you talking to them? What is the one thing you most want them to remember?

Structure: beginning Title A good title is informative (not too general) and supplies some context. Not always a good idea to state the main result in the title. Use humour with great caution. Opening the talk Prepare a first sentence. The rule is: start general. Establish the context and importance of your message. Contents or outline slide Not obligatory. Need not be at the beginning.

Structure: shape Shape of talk Start general Focus for the contents Introduction Body Summary End by opening out again End Tell a story How did you come to this research? View your slides as a storyboard. Think about transitions.

Structure: examples Examples are a wonderful tool Motivating examples. Illustrating examples. Always consider using an example in lieu of a definition. Keep your examples as simple as possible.

Structure: conclusion At the end of the talk The title of the final slide need not be conclusion. Repeat the main message, concisely. Prepare a crisp final sentence. Remember the Golden Rule Never, ever, over-run your time.

Creating a talk There are seven steps to creating a successful talk. 1. Have something to say! 2. Identify your audience. 3. Determine the main message. What is the one thing you most want them to remember? 4. Decide on the broad structure. Find a story to tell. 5. Prepare visual aids. 6. Practice. Make sure that you will not go over time. 7. Check the venue.

Visual aids You don t HAVE to use slides, but most people expect them. Use whatever technology gets the job done: PowerPoint / TeX plugin. LaTeX / Beamer. Flip charts & pen. Overheads made from clear plastic & permanent marker.

Off-the-wall talks One line per slide. One picture per slide. Amusing wordplay. Is your aim is to impress/entertain or to communicate?

Ground rules for good slides Minimality is best Everything on the slide should be clean, simple, and necessary. Use an uncluttered background. Use colour sparingly, to convey content.

Bad slides Minimality is best Everything on the slide should be clean, simple, and necessary. Use an uncluttered background. Use colour sparingly, to convey content. Andrew Ker Presentation Skills 5 May 2014 13/32

Bad slides Minimality is best Everything on the slide should be clean, simple, and necessary. Use an uncluttered background. Use colour sparingly, to convey content. Andrew Ker Presentation Skills 5 May 2014 13/32

Bad slides Minimality is best Everything on the slide should be clean, simple, and necessary. Use an uncluttered background. Use colour sparingly, to convey content.

Bad slides Minimality is best Everything on the slide should be clean, simple, and necessary. Use an uncluttered background. Use colour sparingly, to convey content.

Ground rules for good slides Minimality is best Everything on the slide should be clean, simple, and necessary. Use an uncluttered background. Use colour sparingly, to convey content. Bulleted lists have their place, but constant use is boring. Deeply nested bullet points are very irritating and impossible to parse. Some advocate dark backgrounds with light text. Sometimes you need to avoid the very lowest part of the screen.

Ground rules for good slides Minimality is best Everything on the slide should be clean, simple, and necessary. Use an uncluttered background. Use colour sparingly, to convey content. Bulleted lists have their place, but constant use is boring. Deeply nested bullet points are very irritating and impossible to parse. Some advocate dark backgrounds with light text. Sometimes you need to avoid the very lowest part of the screen.

Ground rules for good slides Font size Do not be tempted to go small: 24 point font, reasonable 20 point font, manageable 18 point font, absolute minimum 16 point font, too small 14 point font, way too small 12 point font, almost invisible Typeface Stick to the same typeface throughout. Can use italics for emphasis, and maybe a different font for code/maths. Some advocate sans serif fonts for readability. (This presentation is 22 point Linux Libertine.)

Ground rules for good slides Density Each slide should have one topic. One frame of the story, like a graphic novel. A short title enforces this. Put only 4-5 things on each slide. All items must fit the slide s focus and be necessary. Use more, sparser, slides rather than fewer denser slides. Use a series of almost-duplicate slides to add detail. Timing Very roughly 1 slide per 2-3 minutes.

What to include? Words are for saying. What is said out loud need not go on the slides. Don t use the slides as your aide-memoire. Discursive (bad) Before giving our main result, we need the following definition, given here mainly to fix notation. Definition: A finite-state machine (or automaton ) is given by a 5-tuple M = (S,,, i, F) Outline (good) FSM definition: M = (S,,, i, F) alphabet states where S is a finite set of states, is the alphabet, blah, blah, blah

What to include? Use Pictures & diagrams. Simple and memorable examples. Simplified formulae. Colour, but only to convey meaning or emphasis. Avoid Multiple sentences of text. Tables of numbers (show a graph instead). Structure which requires you to rewind the slides. Use all the advantages of the visual medium.

embedding extraction Example set the scene Alice Bob or? message Eve cover object insecure channel stego object secret key

Example STE Syntax of formulae f := n is 0 n is 1 f 1 f 2 N f E f Abbreviation n is E = E (n is 1) E (n is 0) Assertions A C response stimulus STE model checking P := STE M A C = = P iff A C M

Example a complicated process Goaled Theorem Prover STE inference rules - h. STE ckt h A C n = p - h. STE ckt h A B - h. STE ckt h B C logic - STE ckt opt1 A B - STE ckt opt2 B C n p STE ckt opt1 A B True reflect Interpreter STE ckt opt2 B C True

mean square error Example experimental results Previously best method New method 1 New method 2 Embedding rate

More bad slides The Striptease Revealing your points one at a time is patronizing and distracting. But adding to or decorating previous slides can be a useful technique. Transitions Animated transitions are irritating and juvenile. Ditto sound effects. Be aware of what cannot be saved in a pdf (sounds, movement, transparent objects).

Practice Practice is important: Ensures that you have thought everything through properly. Gives you confidence. Allows you to time the talk. The only way to know how long your talk takes is to say it out loud. Short talks are much harder than long ones. Leave plenty of time for practice.

Short talks Undergraduate group project seminars: 7 minutes Short talks are difficult. Too long an introduction/conclusion eats up all the time Be ruthless about the contents. Don t waste time on the first slide. No outline. No time to present a full story 3-5 slides of content. What is the one thing you want your audience to remember? Needs more practice

Talks without slides

Creating a talk There are seven steps to creating a successful talk. 1. Have something to say! 2. Identify your audience. 3. Determine the main message. What is the one thing you most want them to remember? 4. Decide on the broad structure. Find a story to tell. 5. Prepare visual aids. 6. Practice. Make sure that you will not go over time. 7. Check the venue.

Check venue Arrive early Test the technology. Check microphone levels if possible. Work out where to stand. Think about lighting. Get comfortable. What to bring? Timer. Laser pointer (or stick). If necessary, prepare laptop in advance. Talk to the chairperson before the session.

Giving the talk Thank the person who invited or introduced you. Memorize your first and last sentence. - use notes for entire talk? Delivery Stand up straight. Move around (a bit). Make eye contact, with more than one person. Speak slowly and articulate clearly. Techniques Pause before and/or lengthen vowels for emphasis. Lead into next slide.

Questions There is usually a protocol for questions: You or the chairperson invites questions. You or the chairperson selects question to answer. Repeat the question (especially if using a microphone). Be brief. Be honest. I don t know I haven t thought about that I ll have to check and get back to you are perfectly good answers. Remember that you can always offer to discuss off-line.

Review The process for creating this talk: 1. Have something to say! 2. Identify your audience. 3. Determine the main message. 4. Decide on the broad structure. 5. Prepare visual aids. 6. Practice. Students with CS knowledge but limited experience of giving talks. Must practice the talk. Story: process for creating a talk. How many slides were actually needed? 7. Check the venue.

Final tips Don t be over- or under-confident. Do the correct thing, not what others appear to do. Always look for improvements. Beware of cultural sensitivities. Practice. Remember the Golden Rule Never, ever, over-run your time.