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Slides and Presentations
Carole Goble | Uli SattlerSchool of Computer Science
University of Manchester
COMP80122
Slides are available at http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/~sattler/teaching/COMP80122/index.html
Welcome to COMP80122
Semester 1
P1:P2: COMP80131 Jon, Simon
Semester 2P3: COMP80142 Bijan, Jon
P4: COMP80122 Carole, Uli
Week 7 Seminar
Week 8 Sem & Prezies
Easter Break Research Symposium
Week 7 Disc. & Prezies
Week 8 Your Prezies
Week 8 Your Prezies
April 23-25
Your Deliverables for COMP80122
1. Active participation
2. Critiques of Research Symposium Presentations
3. A15 minute presentation plus various little exercises, tasks, …
Week 7 Seminar
Week 8 Sem & Prezies
Easter Break Research Symposium
Week 7 Disc. & Prezies
Week 8 Your Prezies
Week 8 Your Prezies
April 23-25
Research Symposium
• April 23-25– see http://studentnet.cs.manchester.ac.uk/pgr/symposium/
• Great place to learn about – school – our school’s research– research in Computer Science– other PhD students
• Great place to think about communication of research– clarity: what makes you “get” what has been done– story lines …– boredom, effect, ...– presentations– slides
Deliverable 1• during the whole seminar, in particular the discussion
of fellow students’ presentations you• are present• participate actively
• we’ll clarify this later
Deliverable 2 • attend all presentations of the Research Symposium • You are assigned 10 presentations; for each
– give a 2-3 sentence summary of its contents and– write a critique: what was good, what could have been better – taking into account all 3 aspects of a presentation
• storyline• slides• presenter
• submit all your summaries and critiques via easychair– your reviews will be anonymous and fed back to presenters– we will discuss these on May 9th
• we’ll clarify this later
Deliverable 3• you will give a 15 minute presentation
• about your research • to a small group of ~13 fellow participants• we discuss what
• worked well • can be improved
• Later today, we • organise you into groups• start scheduling your presentations
• First presentations: • Thursday, March 21st
Central thoughts about presentations
Most important features of a presentation?
TechnicalContributions
ImpressiveResults
ConfidentPresenter
ProfessionalSlides
EntertainingDelivery
Clear Delivery
GoodStructure
A Good Presentation is…
• interesting – tells something new & why we should care
• clear – story line: start, middle, end– follow-able– on the right level of abstraction
for the audience • articulate
– thought through – well prepared…
• right for the audience
kuweight64.blogspot.com/2011/04/quote-for-today.html
The wider view: Communication
…of your research: • Does it matter? • Do you need to be able to communicate your contributions?
– Results can speak for themselves!
A Blunt Answer: Your Viva!
Page 24 of 36
refer any problems or concerns to the Faculty Associate Dean for Postgraduate Research.
PART FIVE: EXAMINER RECOMMENDATIONS
22. Recommendations for doctoral degrees – first
examination
NB: regardless of which recommendation is selected, examiners are required to complete a joint Examiners’ Report Form and upload it to the University’s progression monitoring system via the internal examiner or independent chair within five working days of the oral examination having taken place (see section 19 for further information on the Examiners’ Report Form).
There are three categories of recommendations for doctoral
degrees: ‘A’ (award), ‘B’ (refer) and ‘C’ (reject). Within each category, examiners must select a sub-recommendation, as follows.
22.1 CATEGORY A: AWARD (recommendation A(i) and A(ii))
22.1.1 Award with no corrections (recommendation
A(i)) The examiners should select recommendation A(i) if the
thesis is satisfactory in every way and there are no revisions to be made to it.
The examiners may recommend the award if they are
satisfied that the thesis is satisfactory in every way and that:
• the candidate possesses an appropriate knowledge of
the particular field of learning within which the subject of the thesis falls;
• the research which is reported in the thesis contributes a substantial addition to knowledge;
From: Examination of Doctoral Degrees Policy June 2017
Slightly Sharper Answer: Conferences
• Hopefully, you will present your work at conference/workshop• Great opportunity to
– travel– meet colleagues – network– get feedback
Discuss:
• If you understand X, then you can explain X – well– to everybody– at any length
Corollary: Inability to explain shows lack of understanding
Caveat: Being good at explaining is a skill that takes practise
Communication of CS Research
…?
• A presentation is a monologue with • no/little space for
- questions- clarifications- explanations
• therefor requires - thought- preparation
The Three AspectsThe speaker• body language
– focus • preparedness• voice
– volume– speed– clarity
• nerves • ...
The story• story line• clarity • level• timing• use of terminology• ...
The slides• bullet lists• graphics• fonts• highlights• ...
Effects on you/audience by choices to these?What was helpful to get message across?
Aspect 1: the story line
Good Preparation• is a duty to the audience
– don’t make a group of (influential?) people suffer
• makes you more confident• requires good conceptualization of your work
– might even provide new insight into your work
• takes a looooong time to design: – start well in time, i.e., weeks before – iterative through different versions:
• make slides • practise• think & discuss• …start again
• Setting the scene: – what kind of problem is addressed?– why is that interesting/relevant?
• Focus: – your Research Hypothesis/Question?
• Methodology/approach/work done: – what have you done/are you doing?
• Context:– how does this relate to other people’s work?
• Contributions made: – what is the outcome of the work done? – what are the new insights gained? – how do these answer research hypothesis/question?
• Outlook/next steps/open questions?
Storyline: relevant questionsR
unning example
At right level/enough tim
e
Two approaches to presentation design • iterative:
1. make slides 2. practise3. think & discuss➡ …start again until tired/
happy
• top down:1. gather points to make2. gather terms to define3. ponder whether these are
complete4. arrange in an order5. ponder whether this is
good order/narrative6. make slides7. practise 8. think & discuss➡ …improve
Discuss: which is more efficient?
Preparing a Presentation
Think about: • who is your audience? • who are you?• short memory of audience!• what do you want them to take home?• how much time do you have?
– rule of thumb: 2 min per slide– even if it hurts: you need to leave out certain
• aspects of your work• details of your work
• what technical devices do you have/need?
Let’s try this out (20 mins)
• Spend 3 minutes to sketch out a suitable storyline to tell – a fellow CS PhD student – about your research– in 2-3 minutes (a long elevator pitch)
• Build groups of 3 students who don’t know each other – shuffle around
• Tell each other your storylines
• All: discuss
Coursework for Thursday Make a • outline of your presentation
– following our skeleton above – with title slides and – core concepts/slogans per slide
• list of your terminology – specialist terms that you need in your presentation
• suitable running example
‣ Roughly 1 page ‣ Bring this on Thursday and we’ll discuss
the day after
tomorrow
Aspect 2: the speaker-
first thoughts
The Speaker - Stage Presence • Stage presence, body language, voice,…
– give context/mode, e.g., • surprise• slog• hard work
– help audience follow talk– support understanding– can make a talk
• entertaining • enjoyable
– or• annoying • hard work • boring • impossible to understand
Discuss: presenting is a performance
that can be trained!
People and sites mentioned• Videolectures for numerous recordings of presentations
– http://videolectures.net/• Dave Gorman for great use of slides
– http://www.davegorman.com/• Hans Rosling for talking nicely & clearly with a foreign accent
and for some more examples of – good use of graphics– great entertainment– great communication of tricky, technical statistics!– e.g., https://www.ted.com/talks/
hans_rosling_shows_the_best_stats_you_ve_ever_seen
Organisation Part 1
Deliverable 1• during the whole seminar, in particular the discussion
of fellow students’ presentations you• are present• participate actively
Make sure you’ve signed the attendance sheet
During your presentations, we will all give feedback (directly verbally & via those Feedback Notes)
Deliverable 2 • attend all presentations of the Research Symposium • You are assigned 10 presentations; for each
– give a 2-3 sentence summary of its contents and– write a critique: what was good, what could have been better – taking into account all 3 aspects of a presentation
• storyline• slides• presenter
• submit all your summaries and critiques via easychair– your reviews will be anonymous and fed back to presenters– we will discuss these on May 9th
• we’ll clarify this later
In preparation to this, we will email you • from easychair• ask you to become a PC member of UoMRS2019• follow instructions• submit your 10 critiques there
• following the Feedback Notes• these will be shared anonymously with presenters
Deliverable 3• you will give a 15 minute presentation
• about your research (PhD, previous, Tichy study) • to a small group of ~13 fellow participants• we discuss what
• worked well • can be improved
• Later today, we • organise you into groups• start scheduling your presentations
• First presentations: • Thursday, March 21st
You will • attend all and only your group’s presentations in
• ~4 sessions of ~2hours each• give your presentation there
We will now start with• splitting you into groups
• C1, C2, P, U1, U2• finding
• presentation order for each group• some additional time slots for
• C1• C2
Coursework for Thursday Make a 1. outline of your presentation
– following our skeleton above – with title slides and – core concepts/slogans per slide
2. list of your terminology – specialist terms that you need in your presentation
3. suitable running example
‣ Roughly 1 page ‣ Bring this on Thursday and we’ll discuss
the day after
tomorrow