Monday, March 31, 2014

Oral presentations next week!

Oral Presentations of Research
Due: Week of April 7-11

Essentially you are telling us what coolness your research paper covered. You're just doing it as if we're colleagues in your field, rather than dorm room buddies. Your experience Friday at the Graduate Research Conference should help you get a sense of what that tone looks/sounds like.

Research Paper presentations will take place April 7-11. Each presentation must include a well-organized and professional-looking visual component (to be emailed to me by noon on the day of your presentation) and be 3-5 minutes long. The instructor will give you a warning when you have 30 seconds left, and after that, your presentation will be cut off. If you don’t reach 3 minutes, you must dance, sing or otherwise entertain the class until the 5 minutes are up, so you might want to practice. J

I highly recommend that you practice this presentation at least 3 times before you give it. This will ensure that you know when to move from one part to the next of your visual element, and you will ensure that you meet the time requirement.

I also highly recommend that you use some sort of notes. These are not required, but they can be extremely useful in helping you to remember what you were going to be talking about.

You will be assigned to give feedback to one other person on the days you do not present. You will also fill out a self-assessment form that will be confidential between you and I.

Assessment Criteria:

Delivery: How confident is the speaker? This speaker speaks loud enough to be heard, clearly enough to be understood, and slowly enough that I can keep up. This speaker is speaking to me somewhat conversationally, not reading or reciting.
Assignment: Is this a presentation of the research paper I assigned? This presentation should be focused on which specific communication skills are key, argue for why and how they are important, and then argue for the best way an undergraduate can develop these skills. This presentation should include a visual element and be 5 minutes long. This presentation should include a works cited page.

Visual: How professional and readable is the visual element? This visual element should supplement or add to what the speaker says – not replicate it. This visual should be engaging and interesting without being distracting or off-topic.


Organization: How well organized is the presentation? This presentation should have a clear opening, clear transitions between your main points, and a clear closing (A good sign of a clear closing is unhesitant applause).

Friday: Special Class!! (Not meeting in Ross)

Your mission: go find something cool that has to do with your field, write about it in your blog. Be sure to include the name of a researcher, what department they are from, the name of their project, and details that show why it's cool (for ummm, me, your reader, who is not in any of your fields...). It'd be really cool if you introduced yourself and got contact info. Presenters want this!

Preparation: (see below) Register Before April 2nd. View the program and pick something you want to attend. Attend! You can go any time during the day. Your write-up will be due by Monday. If you want to post pictures to your blog, or a video rather than do a write-up, please do! Just make sure they capture the details listed above.


 

2014 Graduate And Professional Student Research Conference



Friday, April 4th, 2014

10 AM to 6 PM

College of Design

FREE


Registration

All attendees should register for the meeting in advance. Attendees who preregister for the conference will have a name tag ready for them when they arrive. Pre-registration is required for complimentary lunch. To pre-register, click HERE

Why Attend?

  • Come to learn more about the exciting work being conducted by 185 ISU graduate and professional students from all seven colleges
  • Attend the workshops and panel discussions
  • Meet and network with students and faculty within and across diverse disciplines
  • Vote for your favorite poster and 3 Minute Thesis presentation
  • Enjoy free lunch (pre-registration is required)

Program

View the detailed Program HERE. For a concise Program click here

Questions?

Vivek Lawana vjlawana@iastate.edu
Zachary Zenko zenko@iastate.edu

Sponsored by: 
Graduate and Professional Student Senate 
The Provost Office 
College of Agriculture and Life Sciences 
College of Business 
College of Design 
College of Engineering 
Graduate College 
College of Human Sciences 
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 
College of Veterinary Medicine 

(To see the live website, click the link below)

https://www-gpss.sws.iastate.edu/students/gpsrc/?f5redir=a50508cefe86571f0b4eb7c0daaad6b4




Monday, March 24, 2014

Welcome Back!

Homework for Wednesday, 3-26-14

Read EA Chapter 19 "Using Sources"

Look back over your notes and research paper draft, bibliography, and proposal. Remind yourself why this topic is important to you.

Identify two things and write a one-page blog post that talks about them:

1) Why is your research paper important--to you and to the world?

2) What is one thing you are/were having a hard time doing in the process of writing your research paper?

Come to class Wednesday ready to talk about those two things, as well as the reading.


Hope you had a wonderful Spring Break and I'm glad to have you back!

Sunday, March 9, 2014

This week (MArch 10-14)

No Class!

Conferences!

If you are not signed up for a conference with me, email me ASAP. Just FYI, missing a conference is counted at 3 absences (see course policies tab on our blog home page for how much that sucketh). But you see the common sense behind it, right? No class. All week, you have 15 minutes you have to spend with me. Please come in prepared for it--bring in your research proposal and finished bib. Post them on your blog, but have a way to have them hand to discuss with me.

For assistance with your projects, please read: EA chapter 21, "Documenting Sources"

If you don't have your appointment time written down, please email me. And for the record, always, always, always write down your meeting times with instructors!