Suggestions for Giving Talks
I. Understanding the topic:
- If not reporting on your own research, find an interesting article in a peer-reviewed journal.
- Expand your circle of reading.
Follow bibliography references in your source article.
- Formulate a list of the important issues or questions,
which will eventually become an outline for your talk.
- Find and understand the evidence (data, graphs, physical formulae) and present it to your audience.
- Keep a list of questions
and topics you want to find out more about.
These might include definitions, specific numbers you want to track down, or
related background information. More importantly, your list should include
questions about how important physical processes work (e.g. tides or nuclear
fusion) and questions about how something is known.
- Get your questions answered,
by additional reading or by talking to the faculty.
II. Preparing the talk:
- Organize the material into a final outline.
Prepare the outline you will show your audience.
- Include an introduction to the topic,
keeping in mind how much your audience probably does or doesn't know already (a Scientific American article relating to your topic may provide broad background and history).
- Decide which topics deserve the most time,
and which ones you must keep briefer.
If you feel your initial topic is too
broad, you may need to leave out some parts altogether.
You might want to mention in your talk that the material exists, but that you
are skipping it to concentrate on something else.
- Stay focused on the important questions.
- Perform calculations or derivations when appropriate.
Be quantitative rather than qualitative whenever you can.
- Use pictures and graphs.
You may find visuals on the web or in print, or you can make your own.
A plot or a picture communicates more information more quickly
than words, and they keep the talk more interesting.
- Prepare the media.
We provide a laptop and
projector with an internet connection for PowerPoint or PDF format presentations. Use other formats at your own risk. I recommend you test your presentation on the computer 30+ min before your talk, so you have time to fix any compatibility issues. You may bring your own laptop with your presentation loaded and pre-tested. A 24-point font for text is a minimum to be read from the back of the room.
- Format of slides. Your main goal should be conveying information correctly and clearly, and the composition of overhead or PowerPoint slides may affect this. You may consider these "do's and don'ts" suggested by Lana Johnson of the Univ. of Nebraska.
- Decide what, if anything, you want to hand out to the class.
If you do, make sure you have a copy as an overhead or
slide for you to point to, especially for figures or pictures.
- Estimate the time.
A good rule of thumb is to budget roughly 2 min (+/- 1 min, depending on the
density of information) per overhead or slide. Faster than that and the
audience can't keep up, slower and it becomes visually less interesting.
- Practice, with or without an audience. Time yourself -- if you are too long or to short, change your pacing and add
or remove content. Generally when you give a talk, it will go
a little faster than when you practiced it.
III. Giving the talk:
- Address the audience and speak clearly.
Speak loudly enough that people in the back can hear.
- Refer to notes, but don't read them.
If possible, use your prepared overheads or
slides as your key to what to say next. Practicing your talk this way
will make you less reliant on your notes. But still bring your notes
in case you forget a point or get a question that asks for detail.
- Don't block the screen.
- Watch the time.
- Make it clear when you've finished.
IV. Answering questions:
- Make sure you understand the question.
- Try to answer it directly.
- Say you don't know if you don't.
Throw the question out to the audience to see if someone else does.
Andy Layden & John Laird, Spring 2008.