How to give a lecture and survive it

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How to give a lecture and survive it? David Avnir 28. 12. 09

How to give a lecture and survive it? David Avnir 28. 12. 09

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the lecture 4. During the lecture 5. When the lecture has ended 2

1. Lecture planning # Be very sure who is your audience. Ask in advance.

1. Lecture planning # Be very sure who is your audience. Ask in advance. - Homogeneous audience - Heterogeneous audience - Lecturing to judges and decision makers - Friends - Hostile audience 3

1. Lecture planning # Assuming previous knowledge? # Balance between background and new results

1. Lecture planning # Assuming previous knowledge? # Balance between background and new results # Fitting the lecture to the allocated time: 5, 15 -20, 30, 45, 1 hour # If you are inexperienced – measure the time in a rehearsal 4

1. Lecture planning # You have so much to tell – how to select?

1. Lecture planning # You have so much to tell – how to select? - Give priority to what excites you 5

1. Lecture planning # Give the impression that you have much more to tell

1. Lecture planning # Give the impression that you have much more to tell # Do not use the “historical” approach, unless it makes an interesting story Antoine Lavoisier 6

1. Lecture planning Remember: it is your responsibility to give your audience a good

1. Lecture planning Remember: it is your responsibility to give your audience a good time! 7

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the lecture 4. During the lecture 5. When the lecture has ended 8

2. The slides # Font: Simple, Clear, no BOLD, italics here and there #

2. The slides # Font: Simple, Clear, no BOLD, italics here and there # Minimize animations and effects: - Your main message is the content - Animations/effects invite trouble # Slides background: “Background” 9

2. The slides # Contents/Lecture layout: - What should the audience expect? # Font:

2. The slides # Contents/Lecture layout: - What should the audience expect? # Font: Simple, Clear, no BOLD # Minimize animations and effects: - Your main message is the content - Animations/effects invite trouble # Slides background: “Background” 10

2. The slides # Use only slide title for current context # short title

2. The slides # Use only slide title for current context # short title # Avoid repetitive unnecessary information: - Institute, the name of the conference, confidentiality 11

How to give a lecture and survive it? 2. The slides or 2. Tips

How to give a lecture and survive it? 2. The slides or 2. Tips on what to pay attention to while preparing a slides lecture The 23 rd conference on “The effects of the moon on the stock-market trade” Kamchatka, July 3 -7, 2011 12

2. The slides # A slide should be a glance event, not a reading

2. The slides # A slide should be a glance event, not a reading event # Short sentences (max. 1. 5 lines) 13

“Molecular imprinting is a newly developed methodology which provides molecular assemblies of desired structures

“Molecular imprinting is a newly developed methodology which provides molecular assemblies of desired structures and properties and is being increasingly used for several applications such as in separation processes, microreactors, immunoassays and antibodymimics, catalysis, artificial enzymes, biosensor recognition elements and bio- and chemo-sensors. ” Molecular Imprinting # Molecular imprinting is a new, useful method # Desired structures and properties can be tailored # Selected applications: - Separation processes - Microreactors - Sensors - Catalysis - Bio-aspects of all four 14

2. The slides # Use only slide title for current context # A slide

2. The slides # Use only slide title for current context # A slide should be a glance event, not a reading event # Short sentences (max. 1. 5 lines) # Do not overcrowd the slide 15

Nano@Micro: Cd. Se/Zn. S core/shell nanorods@PS/Si. O 2 Luminescence from various nano@micro systems Films:

Nano@Micro: Cd. Se/Zn. S core/shell nanorods@PS/Si. O 2 Luminescence from various nano@micro systems Films: Cd. Se/Zn. S core/shell@PS/silica TEM 11 X 3 nm 3. 6 nm 25 x 4. 5 nm (15 x 3. 8 nm) EDS T. Mokari, U. Banin HRSEM Isolated particles 16

Luminescence from various nano@micro systems Films: Cd. Se/Zn. S core/shell@PS/silica 11 X 3 nm

Luminescence from various nano@micro systems Films: Cd. Se/Zn. S core/shell@PS/silica 11 X 3 nm 3. 6 nm 25 x 4. 5 nm 17

2. The slides # Bad English and misspellings are lecture killers! # Lecturing in

2. The slides # Bad English and misspellings are lecture killers! # Lecturing in Hebrew with an English text 18

2. The slides # Humor; caricatures - Bad humor is lethal to the audience

2. The slides # Humor; caricatures - Bad humor is lethal to the audience 19

2. The slides - Pharmaceutical conference “humor”: 20

2. The slides - Pharmaceutical conference “humor”: 20

2. The slides # Memorize first and last sentences # First slide: Contents/Lecture layout

2. The slides # Memorize first and last sentences # First slide: Contents/Lecture layout - What should the audience expect? # The last slide – with this the audience gets out - Punch line 21

2. The slides # Thanks and credits: - At the beginning - Throughout the

2. The slides # Thanks and credits: - At the beginning - Throughout the lecture - At the end - One before the last slide 22

2. The slides A good slide is worth 1000 printed words 23

2. The slides A good slide is worth 1000 printed words 23

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the lecture 4. During the lecture 5. When the lecture has ended 24

3. Preparations around the lecture # Backups and checks - If you are a

3. Preparations around the lecture # Backups and checks - If you are a Mac user check on a PC - Convert bad slides to JPG # Prepare and send backups like crazy - DOK, CD Email it to yourself/to the organizers (www. You. Send. It. com) 25

3. Preparations around the lecture # What to dress? - The TIE cosmic dilemma

3. Preparations around the lecture # What to dress? - The TIE cosmic dilemma - Respect the audience and the event - Yet feel comfortable: 26

# Comfortable dress: 27

# Comfortable dress: 27

3. Preparations around the lecture # Lecture-hall preparations: - Angle and location of standing:

3. Preparations around the lecture # Lecture-hall preparations: - Angle and location of standing: ^ Facing the audience - Lights: ^ Lights system/selection ^ Windows and shades - Temperature 28

3. Preparations around the lecture # Lecture-hall preparations: - Obstacles: ^ Cables on the

3. Preparations around the lecture # Lecture-hall preparations: - Obstacles: ^ Cables on the floor ^ Chairs - Microphone ^ Is it needed? ^ Fixed ^ Cordless 29

3. Preparations around the lecture # Lecture-hall preparations: - Drinking: ^ Don’t ^ Water,

3. Preparations around the lecture # Lecture-hall preparations: - Drinking: ^ Don’t ^ Water, not soda ^ Pre-opened bottle/can (not a glass/cup) 30

3. Preparations around the lecture # Instruments around your lecture - Pointer: Two, and

3. Preparations around the lecture # Instruments around your lecture - Pointer: Two, and batteries - Stick-pointer - Slides-changer - Your watch on the table! 31

3. Preparations around the lecture Run your lecture in the lecture-hall in advance! 32

3. Preparations around the lecture Run your lecture in the lecture-hall in advance! 32

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the lecture 4. During the lecture 5. When the lecture has ended 33

4. During the lecture # Juggling with too many instruments Microphone, pointer, slide changer,

4. During the lecture # Juggling with too many instruments Microphone, pointer, slide changer, notes, drinking 34

4. During the lecture # Lecturing with notes: Yes? No? # Read your text

4. During the lecture # Lecturing with notes: Yes? No? # Read your text with the audience, guided with a pointer # Use the pointer/stick/cursor to lead the eye - Avoid discotheque light show - Avoid blindness casualties 35

4. During the lecture # Eh! 36

4. During the lecture # Eh! 36

4. During the lecture # Voice level - A bad starter is a killer

4. During the lecture # Voice level - A bad starter is a killer - Monotonous voice is a good sleeping pill 37

4. During the lecture # Still-standing? Moving? No jogging! # Where to look? The

4. During the lecture # Still-standing? Moving? No jogging! # Where to look? The poor audience victim. 38

4. During the lecture # What to do when: - You realize that you

4. During the lecture # What to do when: - You realize that you planned for a different audience - The wrong slide shows up - You are losing the line of thought - You forgot a word in English - System crush! : Computer, projector, microphone 39

4. During the lecture # What to do when: - You regret you agreed

4. During the lecture # What to do when: - You regret you agreed at all to give this lecture! 40

4. During the lecture # After passing 2/3 - time shortage! - Start-delay because

4. During the lecture # After passing 2/3 - time shortage! - Start-delay because of technical problems - You still have 1/2 lecture and too little time is left - You have a cruel chairman that cuts your talk much ahead of time ^ Is shooting the chairman during the lecture an option? 41

4. During the lecture # The art of dynamic adaptation of the lecture 42

4. During the lecture # The art of dynamic adaptation of the lecture 42

4. During the lecture # Disturbances: - General audience (culture) Single person External Cell

4. During the lecture # Disturbances: - General audience (culture) Single person External Cell phones 43

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the

Topics of the lecture 1. Lecture planning 2. The slides 3. Preparations around the lecture 4. During the lecture 5. When the lecture has ended 44

5. When the lecture has ended # How to handle questions? - Don’t -

5. When the lecture has ended # How to handle questions? - Don’t - Questions in the middle or in the end? - Informative questions - Questions which are not clear (language) - Questions to which you do not know the answer - Hostile questions 45

5. When the lecture has ended # Avoid: Why didn’t I? How could I?

5. When the lecture has ended # Avoid: Why didn’t I? How could I? # …and remember… 46

It’s all history now, tiger! 47

It’s all history now, tiger! 47