Miguel Angel Candel Mora ORAL PRESENTATIONS. Técnicas para presentaciones orales en inglés

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Miguel Angel Candel Mora mcandel@upvnet.upv.es ORAL PRESENTATIONS S Técnicas para presentaciones orales en inglés

Oral presentations in English Day 1 Day 2 1. Intro: Types of presentations Structure Students practice 2. Technical tips Evaluation of presentations 3. The language of presentations

1 Introduction Types of presentations The process Structure re Introduction Body Bd Conclusion

Content: A presentation is NOT: a technical journal paper p a final report a book chapter a medium for conveying fine details

Content: Present ideas, not details Applies to Text Equations Graphs, not tables

ABC s of Communication ACCURACY BREVITY C CLARITY

Different Types of Presentation We present in front of our peers to get recognition i of our work. Create an impact. We present to get a job, promotion in the job, graduate admission, fll fellowship, etc. Convince the board. Other Academic & Industrial settings

Speeches are usually classified into one of three categories Impromptu (1-2 min) Standard (2-7min) Keynote (7+ min)

Oral Presentation Process Plan Rehearse Deliver

Planning Involves Determining Purpose Audience Timing i Issues

Also Means Determining Content Visual Aids or Graphics

Most Important Point of All Preparation

A process that yields an effective presentation Step 1: Plan Step 2:Organize Step 3:Prepare the Content Step 4:Practice Step 5:Get there Step 6:Speak to the audience

An INTRODUCTION Who has done this work? What work has preceded this? What is the context? When was the work done? But most importantly, Why is this work important? Give the audience a reason to listen!

Step 1: Plan Who is the audience? M k th l l f th t i l i t t th di Make the level of the material appropriate to the audience What is the message? g Have a clear point that you want to convey

Step 2: Organize How long is the presentation? Present enough material to convey the message Leave time for questions Follow the golden rule

Golden Rule 1) Tell the audience what you re going to tell them 2) Convey the information 3) Tell the the audience what you ve told them

2 Technical Tips Visual Aids Delivery

Visual Aids

Presenting Figures and Diagrams A picture is worth a thousand words. A picture with a few hundred words is worth a thousand words.

Visual Aids Combination i of OHP and flip chart with pens often good. First visual should give the title of talk. Second should show structure of talk main headings. Keep text to minimum never just read text from visuals. Do not use too many visuals guide is one per minute. Use pauses give audience time to comprehend picture. Never show a visual until you want to talk about it. Remove visual once finished i talking about it. Switch off equipment not in use.

Equipment glossary (ld) (slide) projector slides (Br. Eng.) diapositives (Am. Eng.) overhead projector (OHP) transparency (Br. Eng.) slide (Am. Eng.) flip chart whiteboard

Technical Tips How many slides? Typically T i 1-2 12 minutes per slide Too many slides key points lost Too few slides tends to be boring In 20 min talk 10-20 slides Does this slide reinforce my message?

Content: Make it readable 12 point 18 point 24 point 32 point 44 point Match the font size to the presentation room

Overhead Transparencies Use large enough font Do not constantly read from the Ohs Face your audience, project your voice Point to the film not the screen Rehearse, practice, prepare

Using Presentation Tools Use builds for emphasis dim unused points, emphasize important t points Use COLOR effectively red = strong, emotional yellow = optimism blue = calm violet = whimsical, humorous green = money, feedback wanted black = final, authoritative

Presenting Numbers Summarise - do not over-crowd Distil the essence - everythinge theree should be meaningful What's the point - have your story in mind

Do not over-crowd, summarise

What Colors? Must be legible Need contrast on graphics Need contrast on background Use dark background

Red Background A red background is not very effective

Neither Is a green background

Pink Background Is hard to take by most people Often hard to read

Technology: Color Avoid low contrast or dark-on-dark combinations Dark letters on a light background are best for opaque images Light letters on a dark background are best for projected images Avoid red and blue Avoid red and blue

Key Elements of Visuals Background & Color Contrasting Colors Clear and clean text Dark background with light text Avoid nauseating combinations Avoid pastels wash out on projection 26 words

VA Guidelines Remove visual right after using Make sure visual is pertinent

Review Graphics Point out important details Have key ideas in graphics Design for Audience Use Color whenever possible

Delivery

Presentation Mechanics Dress Mannerisms Eye Contact Avoid Laser Light Shows! You are the expert! Learn to mask nerves o o Don t read slides Don t read notes 22 words

Step 4: PRACTICE! Practice so that you are comfortable with the equipment Practice so that the timing is correct The first time you try something is never your best performance:

Videos Professional presentations Effective presentations

Speak to the Audience

Visual aids: glossary

diagram

bar chart

line graph

picture

table

pie chart

flow chart

plan

map

Step 6: Speak to the Audience Three rules: Speak to the audience Speak Audibly Speak Intelligibly

Oral Presentation Tips Be a presenter, not a reader Hands: out of pockets not folded Note the person in the furthest row: Look at them Let them hear you Use a consistent format Rehearse your presentation

Written Presentation Tips Grammer and mispellings are distractions it s its can not cannot Spell checking doesn t check for correct usage, only a thorough reading works sum, some; to, too, two; contract, t counteract t

Using Your Voice Effectively Pitch Volume Speed Tone Enunciation Pronunciation

4 The language of oral presentations 4 The language of oral g g presentations

Three Main Sections 1. Introduction 2. Body 3. Conclusion

Structure: Ending the presentation A summary Restates main point(s). Restates what the audience must understand and remember. Contains no new information. Is short.

Structure: Ending the presentation A conclusion States the logical consequences of what has been said. Often contains recommendations. May contain new and important information. Is short.

Structure: Ending the presentation Questions Inviting gquestions implies that the audience are less expert than the speaker. Beware of the nightmare scenario total silence! Have one or two prepared questions to ask the audience. Keep control of the meeting.

Handling questions Listen very carefully. Ask for repetition or clarification if necessary. Paraphrase the question to check you understand it. Check that the question is relevant. If not, don t answer if you don t want to. Check that the questioner is happy with your answer: eye contact and a pause is often sufficient. ffii Keep control. Don t allow one or two people to dominate. Signal when time is running out Time for one last question. At the end, thank the audience.

Introduction Sets Tone or Attitude Gets Listener s Interest - Related to Topic States Exact Purpose Lists Main Points (Roadmap)

Body Discusses Points From Introduction Provides Obvious Transitions

Conclusion Reviews Main Points Specifies The Actions You Want

SUMMARY

Keys for Successfully Preparing an Oral Presentation Determine i your purpose. Analyze y your audience. Gather supporting information. Organize supporting information. Select appropriate presentation aids. Prepare your presentation. Rehearse your oral presentation.

Keys for Successfully Delivering an Oral Presentation Start positively. Control nervousness. Use presentation aids effectively. Evaluate audience feedback. End d positively. Respond to questions.

TEN DOS AND DON TS FOR PRESENTATIONS

DO: 1. Lots of fbackground research. Even if the information is not used in the presentation, it is useful to have as much knowledge as possible for the discussion and audience questions. 2. Be organized - prepare in plenty of time. 3. Structure your presentation. 4. Focus on the question set. 5. Obtain material from a wide range of sources. 6. Practice your presentation. This helps take away some of the embarrassment when it is for real, and enables you to check the timing. 7. Use note cards. 8. Speak clearly. l 9. Have eye contact with your audience. 10. Use clear OHPs (word processed, large font size, use of bullet points etc.).

DON T: 1. Leave research and preparation until the last minute. 2. Rely on one source of data. 3. Make it up. 4. Just hope that it will come together on the day without preparation and practice. 5. Have no notes to rely on if you get stuck. 6. Worry too much - its not as bad as it seems. 7. Mumble. 8. Read from a script. 9. Rush the presentation by speaking too fast. 10. Go over the time allotted for the presentation.

Summary Follow the Golden Rule Think visually--it s a presentation 2-3 points per slide Concepts, not details Speak audibly, intelligibly, to the audience Slides are readable PRACTICE!

The presenter's toolkit You will need: You may need: notes flip chart pens visual aids bottle of water duplicate of materials on CD, pointer disc, or both adhesive tape and labels timer, if not using your watch paper and pencils for notetaking (in case it is needed) directions to the venue books, brochures, or samples contact name and number. you will refer to

Miguel Angel Candel Mora mcandel@upvnet.upv.es ORAL PRESENTATIONS S Técnicas para presentaciones orales en inglés