- How I want to present my research
- What main findings I want to share with my audience
- Think about what the audience will find interesting
- Keep the information concise and informative
Powerpoint is my chosen programme of choice to present my research. This is a programme I have worked with in the past, although quite a long time ago, so I am looking forward to having a play around with that.
The best thing for me to do now is to go through my Critical Review and any notes I have made to start to draft my presentation slides and decide what is most important to include. I have also made a few notes about tips and things to remember when creating my presentation which are really helpful I sourced these from BAPP Arts Handbooks and blogs;
- Presentation is a celebration of what you have achieved so show off your hard work
- It is a way to illustrate your research in a visually exciting way with concise, interesting explanations
- Approx 10 minute presentation = no more than 1 minute per slide so between 10-15 slides
- Approx 10 minute Q&A session where you can offer more details, clarifications and outcomes to audience
- Include important elements from your inquiry including self-reflection
- Can send draft to tutor for checks
- Don't overload slides with text, keep them clean and easy to understand otherwise your audience will get bored
- Rehearse what you are going to say and decide what it most important to communicate
- Structure = Title page, introduction, evaluation of inquiry tools, analysis of main findings (could possibly follow structure of your critical review as a guideline)
- Use critical review and artefact to explain
- Could present artefact, I will physically hand my out, and explain it
- Talk about the main outcome/benefit and what YOU have learnt as a practitioner
This gives me plenty to get started with!
Lil' Blogger