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Looking for a presentation topic is similar to searching for a topic to write about in academia (cf. «Topic selection, posing problems and questions»). However, you should always be aware that writing a paper is not the same as writing a speech since there is indeed a difference between presenting a topic to listeners and dealing with it for readers. It is also important to consider the audience before asking too much or too little of your listeners. It can be helpful, for example, to distribute an abstract, a summary, or a synopsis of your presentation beforehand. However, sometimes this can also be a distraction.
A manuscript is a presentation's framework and serves as aide memoire when giving your speech. Depending on conditions and personal preference, you can either use an entire text or a script containing only the most important keywords (e.g. headings). Attention should be paid to the following questions:
What should listeners remember? It is common practice to prepare a suitable concept based on 2 or 3 (learning) targets. Especially when presenting a comprehensive work, it is necessary to limit yourself to just a few aspects. Most of the time it makes more sense to focus in detail on just a few issues than to bring up as many topics as possible.
Natural brilliant speakers or rhetoricians are rare; however, presentation techniques are easy to learn!
Create a checklist for your own presentation. Should there be any additional items?
Here is an example (Click here for more information)
In general, a speech delivered naturally while using only a few notes as guidance will be more convincing than a speech just read out loud. However, a lively speech given by means of a manuscript is better than to ad-lib while being ill-prepared. In order to deliver a good speech you need a proper framework of keywords (a manuscript of catchwords or headings) to hold on to. Such a manuscript can consist of file cards, a mind map (cf. «Structuring»), or transparencies that will also serve as a reference for the audience. When preparing for a presentation, we recommend paying special attention to smooth transitions and shifts in subject to improve security.
For paraphrasing (rephrasing or restating terms and sentences), you write down in detail what the presentation is about. Then these sentences will not be read out but rephrased while delivering your speech.
When preparing a manuscript, we recommend writing short sentences to avoid convoluted ones.
It is also advisable to test a speech before the actual talk. Only then will you notice any clumsy transitions, wrong phrases, or if there are enough keywords on your manuscript.
Only when practicing aloud can you estimate the expenditure of time.
It is easier to give a presentation in familiar surroundings. We therefore recommend checking the lecture rooms beforehand to deliver your presentation in an optimal way. Attention should be paid to the following questions:
Feeling comfortable in a room means feeling confident when presenting your project.
You should prepare all necessary material in time to get the feeling of having things under control as well as being ready to begin.
It is advisable to number your pages and transparencies. One tends to drop things when getting nervous; and it can take quite some time to get organized again.
All the means provided have to be checked beforehand; a dried-out pen or a laser pointer without battery, for example, are quite useless.
A good start is essential for a presentation; it is therefore important to be well-prepared.
You should be prepared and able to begin with your presentation right away. Rearranging things (such as attaching one computer to another, for example) should be organized and checked beforehand (at least theoretically). It happens all the time that a laptop cannot be connected to a projector. It is therefore advisable to have a USB stick with your presentation at hand (PDF format).