View Full Version : Presentations!!!
Alpinestarhero
14-01-08, 02:37 PM
Next monday (21st) I am due to give a presentation on my chemistry project...just a ten minute talk on what its about, and whats been done so far.
I'm fine with the content, but what I want some advice on is how to make the powerpoint presenation look good - what colours should I avoid mixing? Should I use a dark background colour, or a bright one? What font size?
Any advice would be great
Matt
Use a lightish background with dark lettering. Whenever I've used anything darkish red or green as a background my students complain. Simple lines in a slide design usually work well rather that swirls or patterns.
Only put brief summary bullet points on each slide and DON'T read them out. They should summarise the point you are talking knowledgeable, intelligently and wittily about! Easy peasy
Good luck!
tigersaw
14-01-08, 02:52 PM
It should be an aid and no more, just bullet points and cues. Dont write too much, dont read it verbatum.
Tell them what you are going to tell them, then tell them, then tell them what you have told them. i.e. Intro, meat, summary.
Your presentation may require diagrams and such - try and avoid special effects and variations in wipes. Finally have a printout of your slides in case they ask for them.
jimmy__riddle
14-01-08, 02:53 PM
I second not just reading out the slides, people will read that themselves.
10 minutes will fly by.
Just out of interest, whats it on?
Alpinestarhero
14-01-08, 03:01 PM
Water repellent polycarbonate coatings, intended for application as a special visor coating so we bikers that ride in all weathers can see where we are going
Thanks for the tips so far,
Matt
missyburd
14-01-08, 03:04 PM
I had some really good notes on this and typically I can't find them! I had to do one last year, I remember being told not to mix red and green, dark writing on a lighter background, sparing use of text - text should be used to highlight points only. Same background throughout is good, keeping with same font. Big bold headings, nice brief bullet points....
HTH
jimmy__riddle
14-01-08, 03:20 PM
Sounds good. combine it with electrochromic smart glass and youve got a cool but expensive visor!
Alpinestarhero
14-01-08, 03:28 PM
Sounds good. combine it with electrochromic smart glass and youve got a cool but expensive visor!
Hang on guv', I'm just getting the hang of how to make the surface water repellant :shock:
Keeping the words on the slides to a minimum, and trying to keep them a bit spaced out so its easier to read. Got one image of my wet arai so far, dont really want to go overboard though.
Matt
Speedy Claire
14-01-08, 04:21 PM
I do a quite of a lot of power point presentations and research has proven that the best colours to use are a pale yellow background with dark blue or black wording. Would echo all of the above points and would also add if you`re new to power point keep the effects simple ie. fading, zooming. I use verdana or tahoma, the size of the font depends on how much info is gonna be on your slide. Headings i always make a bit bigger and in bold. If you like pm me an i`ll email you one of my presentations to give you an idea
Alpinestarhero
14-01-08, 04:29 PM
Thanks claire, I was wondering what colour to use. I've gone for a pale yellow. We all know yellow is the fastest colour, and hopefully its unique properties will extend into me giving a good presentation
Matt
Pedro68
14-01-08, 04:33 PM
I don't do a lot of presentations, but maaaan I've had to sit thru plenty (studies and work-wise). One tip I would definitely recommend is for printing the presentation ... I'm not sure exactly how you would do this (maybe those Powerpoint gurus out there can offer some help?), but it is something that i've seen in presentations handed to me and I find REALLY useful ... if you could print the slides 2-up, with the bottom half of the page being just a simple "text-entry-like" box for the purpose of note-making, I found that helped me to make notes about some of the bullet-points.
What I've sometimes found with bullet-point presentations that perhaps didn't contain "all the relevant information", was that when I went back to them at a later date, I had no idea what some of the bullet-points were about!?
But on the printed presentations with a nice big space for note-taking, it allows the audience to make notes at the time of the presentation for future reference - something that helped me immensely during my studies :) (from an audience/pupil perspective).
Oh and obviously if you're gonna do this - hand out the notes BEFORE the presentation ;-)
dissuade
14-01-08, 04:41 PM
What they said,
And have a conclusion/summary slide. but don't mention any new things in your summary slide, it's just a wrap up of the presentation as a whole.
Generally the guidelines on unversity/marked presentations are of the 10% rule - you can go 10% of the time over or under, after that they get hacked off. So make sure your sentences are precise and brief.
I have always been told NEVER to look at the projector screen - you will no doubt have a laptop or some sort of smaller screen in front of you so don't turn your back on your audience to double check every slide has come up on the big one. If you are using a pointing device, then obviously looking at the screen is no big deal, but it's not your sole audience.
Smile, be jovial, it'll all be ok. And good luck.
xx
OK, the basics have been covered by others so I'll just add to them...
... if you've got something complecated, like a table, graph, or (heaven forbid) a spreadsheet or anything else containing maths have a 'pack' of printouts to give to people at the beginning. Then when you get to that point in your presentation, mention that it can be refered to... obviously if you're handing out copies of the whole thing then you don't need to do specific pages.
Fonts - pick ONE and stick to it. Use a bold version, italicised and underline, but don't have a mess of loads of different fonts.
San serif fonts (Ariel, Helvetica etc) are far better in Powerpoint that serif (Times etc).
Don't use a drop shadow on any text - far from highlighting it or making it stand out it just messes with people's eyes.
However, DO make sure your pictures have some form of frame, not too heavy, just something that clearly marks the edges. Drop shadow on them can be OK.
And the biggy, if you can, don't rely on Powerpoint as your only tool - in the dark after x number of presentations, people get dozy.
Keep them alert - if you can, get someone to assist you by standing by the lightswitch. At some point part way through, request the lights be put back on and actually show them something. Something physical, tactile, a break form a dark room and a screen.
Take your crash helmet in, with a plastic tray and a plant mister - spray water on it so they can actually physically see the point you are trying to make. Beats a photo any day.
Then you ask for the lights to be dimmed again as you proceed to the next point.
It breaks the monotony a treat and shows that you have really thought about how best to get you information across.
The above is from a past as a graphic designer and having to make presentations to clients (who generally knew what they wanted once you'd told it too them and made it sound like their idea ;)) as well as coaching our first group presentation on my degree course.
We aced it by the way. :D
Great advice above.
Keep it simple, less is more.
The 3 phase rule is good advice
1 - this is what I'm going to tell you
2 - I'm telling you
3 - this is what I've just told you.
Alpinestarhero
14-01-08, 06:52 PM
K, thats a great idea about taking my helmet in and wetting it for all the people to see what the problem is. I'll ask if thats ok to do; my project supervisor said its a scientific presentation....but I dont see why it has to be stale and boring like many scientific presentations!
If i had it my way, I'd ride the SV into the room as my big entrance
Matt
arenalife
14-01-08, 08:00 PM
I do a quite of a lot of power point presentations and research has proven that the best colours to use are a pale yellow background with dark blue or black wording. Would echo all of the above points and would also add if you`re new to power point keep the effects simple ie. fading, zooming. I use verdana or tahoma, the size of the font depends on how much info is gonna be on your slide. Headings i always make a bit bigger and in bold. If you like pm me an i`ll email you one of my presentations to give you an idea
Lol, I love the irony of your annoying pink text. :eek:
Good advice.
Speedy Claire
14-01-08, 09:25 PM
Very sorry... is just a habit, have been using pink text on another bike forum for 4 years now. Will change it from now on :(
yorkie_chris
14-01-08, 09:50 PM
Don't spend all your time on doing fancy zooms and effects, right pain.
metalmonkey
15-01-08, 12:15 AM
Don't know a thing about power point, there alwasy seems to be someone better than me at it.
Just wanted to say Good Luck:D Its an awesome idea.
northwind
15-01-08, 12:47 AM
Fill it with as many zooms, wipes, spins and other superfluous w**k as you possibly can, like George Lucas.
Personally I always use my slides/powerpoint/whatever as my cheat sheets too- using notes always bumps me out of my groove but I try to contruct the overheads so that they'll keep me on track as well as the mark. Works for me, your mileage may vary. I'm a good editor so I always hone the slides down to the least possible information to still make the point suitably- too much stuff on screen distracts people from you, it should be a support for the presenter and the audience but it shouldn't take over. IMO ;)
Couldn't agree more about demonstrating the results- are you using a traditional overhead, or a video table? Either way, if you're presenting to more than a handful of people I'd see if there's any practical way to demo it on the screen.
And I still think you should try and get a shot from inside the helmet. Even if it means mounting it on your handlebars with a camera inside it ;) No amount of pictures with pretty beads on it will be as effective as a dog's eye view.
This one, maybe you shouldn't use, but it might be useful to think of the other applications- ie, "While this has been developed with bikes in mind blah blah, it could have other more widespread uses in marine/aviation industries..." that sort of thing. But then that might just divert attention.
Alpinestarhero
15-01-08, 09:20 AM
This one, maybe you shouldn't use, but it might be useful to think of the other applications- ie, "While this has been developed with bikes in mind blah blah, it could have other more widespread uses in marine/aviation industries..." that sort of thing. But then that might just divert attention.
This is an important point actualy, that the research has far reaching applications...not just for my own personal benefit, but other area's of science (microfluidics always springs to mind).
And i'll try and get a shot from inside the helmet, that would look better
Matt
Personally I was always advised at uni to avoid special effects (fading etc) just bring the slide up with all the text on it so you don't have to keep clicking away! Good luck, ten minutes will fly by.
missyburd
15-01-08, 11:22 AM
Personally I was always advised at uni to avoid special effects (fading etc) just bring the slide up with all the text on it so you don't have to keep clicking away! Good luck, ten minutes will fly by.
Yeah I'd agree with that. Used to have a lecturer who would put writing up and then when she'd made her point would click so that text would change colour to sort of 'stay in the background' and then the next point would come flying in. Too many things happening at once there and if you're trying to notes it's just a pain as you're straining to read what she just said and by that time she's moved onto something else.
I find slides with stationary text can be followed easier, but if you have points which come up as you say them, that's handy too. Then whoever's reading isn't getting muddled with lots of points on one slide. Oh and don't use plain black and white (fairly obvious I guess) as that becomes monotonous (have a lecturer who does that too lol).
Good luck with it!
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