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Tips on how to successfully present a research paper to an academic audience
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A. Substance
- Tell a story at the beginning (parable; personalize)
- Tell audience what your agenda is (3-4 parts)
- Tell them what your conclusion is
- Make your experimental methods clear!! (flowchart)
- If your audience are all experts in the area (e.g., D.R.R.C.)... don't bore them...
- If your audience are not experts (high variance): broad + deep spikes
- Write down the questions that you get or have a friend do this for you
B. Style
- Use an overhead projector or powerpoint computer display
- Do not make font too small
- 50 min maximum (even if you have 90 minute slot)
- Do not let anyone take away your conclusions (recency effect)
- Do not get defensive (mode of science and truth and beauty)
- What to do if someone attacks your method/assumptions
- What to do if someone attacks you
- Never refuse to take questions at any point during the talk
- Never insist that questions should be postponed until end of talk
- Never turn questions around on the questioner...
- Be thoughtful about questions (they are what you are evaluated upon)
- Rehearse your opener!
- Rehearse your answers to questions...
C. Action items you can take now
- Seize every single public speaking opportunity you can
- Conference talk (academy): 12-15 min
- MPA talks (May, Palmer House)
- Graduate students organize speaker series
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