M. Huber Tips For In-Class Presentations
M. Huber Tips For In-Class Presentations
Huber
Tips for in-class presentations
An in-class presentation is a 15-20-minute overview of a subject assigned in a course. You are not
expected to come up with groundbreaking new insights and results but to present to your fellow-
students a clear, step-by- step and easy-to-follow summary of your theme. Remember that since you
as the presenters have read the relevant literature you are the experts and that you have to explain
your subject to the other participants, who have not read up on the matter. You are doing the
presentation for the benefit of your fellow students (and to get practice in giving talks), not for the
teacher! One common mistake is that the presenters face the teacher rather than the other course
participants during their presentation.
6. Illustrative material
Your presentation will be livelier and more interesting for the audience if you use pictures, maps,
diagrams, tables, example texts, audio samples, etc. On the other hand, avoid cluttering your talk with
irrelevant information and resist the temptation to use too many pictures etc. (this will probably only
distract from your topic).
7. Prepare a handout
Your presentation must be accompanied by a handout, whose header should contain 1. the name of
the seminar, the teacher’s name and the semester, 2. the title of your talk, and 3. your name. A
references section, containing the literature consulted, is placed at the end of the handout.
The handout should not only contain the structure of the talk but also short summaries of its individual
sections, along with definitions, important examples and illustrations. The criterion for a good handout
is that its drift and arguments are understandable even when somebody takes it up again after a year.
On the other hand, handouts are there to support your talk, not to replace it or to simply serve as
manuscript that you read out from. If you can do nothing more during your talk than read out the
handout, then the latter is too detailled.
Phonetic fonts (IPA) for the computer can be downloaded for free at http://www.sil.org (e.g. Charis
SIL, a unicode font that can be interpreted by different computer platforms).