Presentation report
CIST 3000: Advanced Writing for IS&T
Specifications for Assignment 7: Presentation
DUE DATE: Week ____/Date ________
Outline (20 Points) & Presentation (100 Points)
120 Points TOTAL
OVERVIEW
In this seventh and final assignment, you will create a presentation from the key contents of your report. The presentation is for an audience of professionals. The outline is an outline of your presentation (not of the report itself).
The lecture on Presenting a Technical Report is essential to understanding what is required for this deliverable. Review the lecture notes from class and read Chapter 23 before starting on your presentation. You will deliver your presentation and turn in the outline on the due date.
PART 1: PRESENTATION
Format and Timing
Create an oral presentation of your report that is of professional quality and accompanied by slides. Create the presentation for the audience that you have identified in your report, for your professor, and for your class colleagues (who are stand-ins for professional colleagues in a workplace setting).
Design your presentation appropriately. Design your slides to be clear and appealing. Use visuals in your slides. Review guidelines for developing slides in Chapter 23 and the accompanying lecture. Use your judgment and keep your audience in mind.
Time the presentation to be from 5-7 minutes long. Professional presentations often have very tight time windows, and learning to stay within that timing is an important skill. A presentation that is shorter or longer than 5-7 minutes will lose points.
Use the extemporaneous method to deliver the presentation (see Table 23.2, p. 580 of text). Practice the presentation before you present it. Do not read from a script, though you may use note cards or your outline to remind yourself of major points. Think of the presentation as something you would do in a workplace setting, before a group of people who expect you to speak knowledgeably about your subject with support from accompanying slides.
Citation of Sources on Slides
Cite your sources on the slides. Use parenthetical citations at the bottom of a slide as appropriate and include a complete list of citations used in the talk on a separate slide at the end of the presentation. Use APA format for citations. You should have a references slide at the end of your presentation.
PART 2: OUTLINE
Develop a written, detailed outline of your presentation. The outline is not a verbatim script of the presentation, but an outline of the points to be made during the delivery of material. The outline is a planning tool for you and it should include enough information that someone else can read it and understand the presentation. That means that the outline provides more information than just bullet points on a slide, but not as much as you actually say during the presentation itself.
The outline should match what you actually say. It can happen that a presenter starts with an outline and then ends up saying something completely different. Start with your outline, but then update the outline after you have practiced your final presentation to ensure that one matches the other.
Look again at Chapter 10, Chapter 23 (pp. 581-583), and our previous guidelines for outlining. Use an acceptable format, proofread, and apply all our usual writing standards.
Simply use an APA style heading at the top of your outline. The outline does not require a cover letter.
SUBMISSION OF DELIVERABLES
Submit the outline as a PDF file on Canvas. Bring ONE hard copy to class on the due date. Save the file as LastNameA6 prior to submitting.
GRADING
The folder for Assignment 7 contains the grading rubric for the presentation and outline. The dimensions and the details for each dimension are different from previous assignments. Please review the rubric carefully so that you have a good understanding of what it takes to succeed.
CIST 3000: Advanced Writing for IS&T
Specifications for Assignment 7
:
Presentation
DUE
DATE:
Week ____/Date ________
Outline (20
Points
) &
Presentation (100
Points)
120
Points TOTAL
OVERVIEW
In
this
seventh
and final
assignment,
you
will
create a
presentation
from the key contents of
your report
.
The
presentation is for an audience of professionals.
The outline is
an outline
of your presentation
(
not
of the report
itself
)
.
The
lecture on Presenting a Technical Report
is
essential
to understanding what is required for this deliverable.
Review
the lecture
notes from class
and read Chapter
2
3
before starting
on
your
presentation
.
You will
deliver your
presentation and turn in the outline on the due date.
PAR
T
1
:
PRESENTATION
Format and Timing
Create a
n
oral presentation of your report that is
of professional quality and
accompanied by
slides
. Create
the
presentation for the audience that you have identified
in
your report
, for
your professor
,
and for your
c
lass
colleagues (
who
are stand
-
ins for professional colleagues in a workplace setting).
Design your presentation appropriately. Design your slid
es to be clear and appealing.
Use visuals in your slides.
Review
guidelines for developing slides in
Chapter 2
3
and
the accompanying lecture
. Use your judgment and keep
your audience in mind.
Time the
presentation
to
be from
5
-
7
minutes long. Professional presentations often have very tight time windows,
and learning to stay
within that timing
is an important skill.
A presentation that is shorter or longer
than
5
-
7
minutes
will lose points.
Use the extemporaneous method to
deliver the presentation (see Table 2
3
.2, p.
580
of text).
Practice the
presentation
before you present
it. Do not read from a script
, though you may use note cards or your outline to
remind yourself of major points
. Think of the presentation as
something
you would do in a workplace setting,
before a group of people who expect you to speak kn
owledgeably about your subject with
support from
accompanying
slides
.
Citation of Sources on Slides
Cite your sources on the slides. Use
parenthetical
citations at th
e bottom of a slide
as
appropriate
and include a
complete list of citations used
in the talk
on a separate slide at the end of the presentation.
Use APA format for
citations.
You should have a references slide at the end of your presentation.
Cite the source of each visual used on the slides. Do not use copyrighted visuals unless you have written permission
from the copyright owner and hand in that permission with the presen
tation, just as you did with the report.
PART
2
: OUTLINE
Develop a written, detailed outline of your presentation. The outline is not a verbatim script of the presentation, but
an outline of the p
oints to be made during the delivery of material
. The ou
tline is a planning tool for you
and
it
should include enough information that someone else can read it and understand the presentation. That means that
the outline provides more information than just bullet points on
a
slide, but not as much as you
actual
ly say during
the presentation
itself.
CIST 3000: Advanced Writing for IS&T
Specifications for Assignment 7: Presentation
DUE DATE: Week ____/Date ________
Outline (20 Points) & Presentation (100 Points)
120 Points TOTAL
OVERVIEW
In this seventh and final assignment, you will create a presentation from the key contents of your report. The
presentation is for an audience of professionals. The outline is an outline of your presentation (not of the report
itself).
The lecture on Presenting a Technical Report is essential to understanding what is required for this deliverable.
Review the lecture notes from class and read Chapter 23 before starting on your presentation. You will deliver your
presentation and turn in the outline on the due date.
PART 1: PRESENTATION
Format and Timing
Create an oral presentation of your report that is of professional quality and accompanied by slides. Create the
presentation for the audience that you have identified in your report, for your professor, and for your class
colleagues (who are stand-ins for professional colleagues in a workplace setting).
Design your presentation appropriately. Design your slides to be clear and appealing. Use visuals in your slides.
Review guidelines for developing slides in Chapter 23 and the accompanying lecture. Use your judgment and keep
your audience in mind.
Time the presentation to be from 5-7 minutes long. Professional presentations often have very tight time windows,
and learning to stay within that timing is an important skill. A presentation that is shorter or longer than 5-7 minutes
will lose points.
Use the extemporaneous method to deliver the presentation (see Table 23.2, p. 580 of text). Practice the
presentation before you present it. Do not read from a script, though you may use note cards or your outline to
remind yourself of major points. Think of the presentation as something you would do in a workplace setting,
before a group of people who expect you to speak knowledgeably about your subject with support from
accompanying slides.
Citation of Sources on Slides
Cite your sources on the slides. Use parenthetical citations at the bottom of a slide as appropriate and include a
complete list of citations used in the talk on a separate slide at the end of the presentation. Use APA format for
citations. You should have a references slide at the end of your presentation.
Cite the source of each visual used on the slides. Do not use copyrighted visuals unless you have written permission
from the copyright owner and hand in that permission with the presentation, just as you did with the report.
PART 2: OUTLINE
Develop a written, detailed outline of your presentation. The outline is not a verbatim script of the presentation, but
an outline of the points to be made during the delivery of material. The outline is a planning tool for you and it
should include enough information that someone else can read it and understand the presentation. That means that
the outline provides more information than just bullet points on a slide, but not as much as you actually say during
the presentation itself.