oral presentation skills 1 sticky scientific presentations 2012

29
CLIMB Delivering scientific presentations and posters for impact Steve Lee, PhD Assistant Director Northwestern University Fall 2012 Collaborative Learning and Integrated Mentoring in the Biosciences

Upload: steve-lee

Post on 27-Jan-2015

146 views

Category:

Education


0 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

CLIMB

Delivering scientific presentations and posters for impact

Steve Lee, PhD

Assistant DirectorNorthwestern UniversityFall 2012

Collaborative Learning and Integrated Mentoringin the Biosciences

Page 2: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Deliver your presentations for impact

○ Intellectual Merit

○ Broader Impact

2

But why?

Because reviewers are considering impact

Overall Impact: Reviewers will provide an overall impact/priority score to reflect their assessment of the likelihood for the project to exert a sustained, powerful influence on the research fields involved

NIH criteria

NSFcriteria

Page 3: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

In these activities, what helps and what makes it difficult to remember?

1. Memorize as many letters as possible

F T U S P B T I H B

F B I U S B H T T P

2. Remember as much of the text as possible

3

Let’s start with 2 activities

Page 4: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

What are some challenges in scientific presentations and posters?

4

Page 5: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

What are some strategic advantages in scientific presentations?

5

Page 6: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

We will address:

1. Principles of Effective Communication

● challenges in communication

● ideas that “stick”

● speaking in different communication styles

2. Some Practical Suggestions

● tips for creating slides

● good and poor examples

● sample video

6

Page 7: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

What’s a “sticky” idea?

Similar to the NIH

definition for impact

7

Part 1: Principles of Effective Communication

The project must exert a

sustained, powerful influence

A sticky idea is understood and

remembered, and has lasting impact to

change people’s opinions or behavior

Page 8: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Why is it so hard to communicate effectively?Because of The Curse of Knowledge

● Research at Stanford with tappers and listeners

○ tapper was given a popular song

○ listener had to guess the song

○ beforehand, tapper was asked to predict the % of songs that would be guessed correctly

○ tappers predicted: ~50%

○ actual: 3% (!)

● The Curse: those with knowledge (tappers) are cursed with not understanding the audience’s (listeners) perspective

8

Page 9: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

telling ≠ e%ective communication

Instead, transform your ideas to

stick

9

Page 10: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Transform your ideas to stick

Use as many of these 6 key principles as possible:

Simple: find and share the core message

Unexpected: get their attention – surprise or twist

Concrete: help people understand – be specific

Credible: help people believe – give evidence

Emotional: help people to care – inspire

Stories: share ideas to simulate and inspire10

Page 11: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Speak to a broad audienceusing the Myers-Briggs types

11

How do you prefer:

● to relate to people?

● to gather information?

● to make decisions?

● to relate to the outside world?

○ Extroverts○ Introverts

○ Sensors○ INtuitors

○ Thinkers○ Feelers

○ Judgers○ Perceivers

Page 12: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

12

S-types

N-types

Communication strengths

○ visual and audio info

○ concrete information

○ details; real experiences

○ realistic; grounded

○ inspirational

○ stories; visionaries

○ big picture & patterns

○ significance; analogies

Potential problems

○ dry or flat

○ random details

○ lack meaning

○ vague

○ ambiguous

○ not concrete

Apply a mix of communication styles

Communicate to inform and inspire your audience!

Page 13: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

●What core messages need to “stick”?

○ prioritize your messages

●Don’t just try to compress a longer talk

●Don’t just “get through the material”

13

Part 2: Some Practical Suggestions

How do you start?

Page 14: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Craft a scientific story

● the classic elements of a story are:○ thesis – intro characters, context, significance

○ antithesis – problem or question

○ synthesis – wrap up and conclusions

● set your story with clear rhetorical markers○ context and significance

○ complication

○ question or problem

○ hypothesis or proposal14

Page 15: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

One challenge is to go broad and deep

speak to broad audiences: use analogies and illustrations

15

speak to experts:

use 1 or 2 examples in depth

Page 16: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Creating Slides

● Plan to spend 1-2 minutes per slide○ 10 min talk: 6-9 slides

○ 30 min talk: 15-20 slides

○ etc

●Maximize the “info to ink ratio”

16

info

ink

Page 17: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Use “message” titles

17

“Topic” titles only give the topic of the slide.

“Message” titles deliver your whole message.

Studies show more people remember content in message titles.

Page 18: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Or use “question” titles

18

Also, good useof outline

Page 19: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Convert bullet lists into word tables(if possible)

19

bullet lists word tables

better use of spacewith larger fonts

Page 20: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Here’s a good example of word tables

20

main intro slide

subsequentslides

Page 21: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Only use sans serif fonts

21

Thin ThinTimes New Roman Arial

Serif Font Sans Serif Font

SerifsThick andthin strokes

Plain Strokes haveeven width

easier to read

Page 22: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Avoid using color gradients

What you see on your monitor is not what the audience sees on the screen.

22

tough to read

Page 23: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Additional tips for creating slides

● Organize experiments for clear communication

○ trials done in lab

– trial A; trial B; trial C; trial D – last trial works

○ during a presentation

– chronological order: A, B, C, D

– better order: D and then A, B, C (briefly)

○ don’t drag the audience through useless information

● To minimize slides, place extra content on slides or handouts for afterwards.

23

Page 24: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Suggestions for delivering your talk

● If you get nervous, try memorizing your introduction. (more tips on handout)

● Eye contact helps to relate with your audience.

● Connect your spoken words with the slides.

● Your physical posture …

○ affects the audience’s perception of you

○ and your performance as well

● Practice and get feedback – early and often

24

Page 25: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Make your poster “skimmable”

25

Page 26: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Avoid lazy conversions of papers or slides into a poster, or a “data dump”

26

Page 27: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

More tips for posters

27

● Engage your listener

○ Ask about their research and interests

● Viewers won’t read paragraphs of text

○ summarize in word tables or bullet lists

● Annotate data with your main message

○ explain the significance of the data

● Take advantage of your medium

● Give the big, “skimmable” picture

Page 28: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

Resources

● Chip and Dan Heath’s

Made to Stick

●Making Oral Presentations: Dealing with Nervousness (handout)

● Amy Cuddy’s Poptech talk

● Power Poses

28

Page 29: Oral presentation skills 1   sticky scientific presentations 2012

29

Transform your ideas to

stick