Oral Presentation Tips
Oral Presentation Tips
An oral presentation is more than just reading a paper or set of slides to an audience. How
you deliver your presentation is at least as important in effectively communicating your
message as what you say. Use these guidelines to learn simple tools that he lp you prepare
and present an effective presentation, and design PowerPoint slides that support and
enhance your talk.
Presenting Effectively
When you start your presentation, the audience will be interested in what you say. Use
these tips to help keep them interested throughout your presentation:
Be excited. You are talking about something exciting. If you remember to be excited, your
audience will feel it and automatically become more interested.
Speak with confidence. When you are speaking, you are the authority on your topic, but do
not pretend that you know everything. If you do not know the answer to a question, admit
it. Consider deferring the question to your mentor or offer to look into the matter further.
Make eye contact with the audience. Your purpose is to communicate with your audience,
and people listen more if they feel you are talking directly to them. As you speak, let your
eyes settle on one person for several seconds before moving on to somebody else. You do
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not have to make eye contact with everybody, but make sure you connect wit h all areas of
the audience equally.
Avoid reading from the screen. First, if you are reading from the screen, you are not making
eye contact with your audience. Second, if you put it on your slide, it is because you wanted
them to read it, not you.
Blank the screen when a slide is unnecessary. A slide that is not related to what you are
speaking about can distract the audience. Pressing the letter B or the period key displays a
black screen, which lets the audience concentrate solely on your words. Press t he same key
to restore the display.
Use a pointer only when necessary. If you are using a laser pointer, remember to keep it off
unless you need to highlight something on the screen.
Explain your equations and graphs. When you display equations, explain them fully. Point
out all constants and dependent and independent variables. With graphs, tell how they
support your point. Explain the x- and y-axes and show how the graph progresses from left
to right.
Pause. Pauses bring audible structure to your presentation. They emphasize important
information, make transitions obvious, and give the audience time to catch up between
points and to read new slides. Pauses always feel much longer to speakers than to listeners.
Practice counting silently to three (slowly) between points.
Avoid filler words. Um, like, you know, and many others. To an audience, these are
indications that you do not know what to say; you sound uncomfortable, so they start to feel
uncomfortable as well. Speak slowly enough that you can collect your thoughts before
moving ahead. If you really do not know what to say, pause silently until you do.
Relax. It is hard to relax when you are nervous, but your audience will be much more
comfortable if you are too.
Breathe. It is fine to be nervous. In fact, you should be all good presenters are nervous every
time they are in front of an audience. The most effective way to keep your nerves in check
aside from a lot of practice before hand is to remember to breathe deeply throughout your
presentation.
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Acknowledge the people who supported your research. Be sure to thank the people who
made your research possible, including your mentor, research team, collaborators, and other
sources of funding and support.
Sharing your work can help you expand your network of contacts who share your research
interests. For undergraduate researcher who intend to complete a graduate degree, presenting
can be an invaluable experience. We recommend discussing your interest in sharing your
research with your faculty advisor. They can help match your interests with the appropriate
venue.
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