Research Presentation Template: This Template Can Be Used For 2 Main Types of Research Presentations
Research Presentation Template: This Template Can Be Used For 2 Main Types of Research Presentations
• Research Methods
– Design
– Sample
– Procedures
– Data Analysis
• Results
• Discussion
• Acknowledgements
• References
• Questions
General Presentation Guidelines
The object is to interest and inform, not to entertain.
• Time: Too hurried a pace will not allow your audience to digest your material. Too slow a
pace will leave them bored. Most presentations have a fixed time limit so PRACTICE YOUR
TALK to be sure to end within a minute of the set time. A general rule of thumb is one minute
per content slide (10 minutes, 10 content slides)
• Eyes: Engage your audience with good eye contact. Make every person in the room feel like
the most important member of the audience.
• Voice: Your voice should comfortably reach the person furthest removed from you. Try to
project without shouting. Expressive intonation will help hold your audience’s attention.
• Posture: Remain comfortable and relaxed. Speak to your audience, not to your notes or
slides. Keep your head up and your eyes in contact with your listeners. You may occasionally
glace at your notes, but avoid reading.
• Smile: A smile conveys confidence and helps relax yourself and your audience. Before
including comedy, however, try your material on an honest friend. If you are the only one to
recognized the intended humor in your content, save it for yourself.
• Language: Effective speakers avoid nervous expressions. Novice speakers fear silence and
try to bridge their ideas with “connectors.” Purge the following expressions from your
vocabulary: “you know?’, “um”, “uh”, all right?”, “OK?”, “but…I…uh”
• Dress: Your clothing makes a statement. Consider the venue, the content of your
presentation, and the impact your attire will have on the audience.
Title of Research Proposal
Author(s) Names
(Identify faculty mentor, if applicable)
Introduction
• In this section you want to inform your
audience of all the relevant background
information of your research project
• Each bullet point should be a concise
summary of what you will tell the audience
verbally
• Written text of your verbal presentation
belongs on notes pages reserved for your
personal use during the presentation
What This Study Adds . . .
• Similar to the section included on the first
page of every Pediatrics article
• Summarize in 50 words or less what your
study adds to the information that’s already
published
EXAMPLE: This large cohort study demonstrates that topical
Abc® is a well-tolerated alternative to oral Xyz® for specific
condition Q. It’s most effective for symptom P regardless of
severity. Greater improvement occurs in children less than 5
years of age. Longer treatment results in better response.
Background/Literature Review
• This will be a brief literature review for your
audience, where you discuss only the most
relevant articles or texts that you used in your
research
• Use this section to build the case for your
study; explain why this research is important.
• In this section, use text citation format (authors,
publication year) and a brief statement about
what you gleaned from their work and how it
supports your research
• Include the full reference at the end of
presentation
Background/Literature Review
• Insert additional slides for
background/literature review as needed
• It is likely that you will have 3-4 slides for this
section
Purpose
• A clear, concise statement of the specific
aim or objective of the study
• Includes variables, population, and setting
• Examples of statement prefix: “The purpose
of this study is to:
• Describe…
• Determine differences between groups…
• Examine relationships among…
• Determine the effect of…
Study Aim(s)
• Specific statements that focus on what
variables or concepts are to be described and
what relationships might exist among them
• Create an aim statement for each set of
variables to be studied
Hypothesis(es)
• Include this formal statement of the expected
relationships among variables
• A hypothesis translates the research purpose
and aims into a clear explanation or
prediction of the expected results or
outcomes of the study
• Include variables to be measured/manipulated
• Identifies population under study
• Indicates the proposed outcomes of the study
• Influence of study design, sampling technique, data collection,
analysis methods and interpretation of findings
Example
Study Purpose: To describe the use of a progressive mobility
protocol in the surgical heart unit.
Specific Aims:
1. To compare the ICU LOS from before to after use of mobility
protocol as measured by average daily LOS over 6 months.
2. To compare the number of ventilator hours from before to
after use of mobility protocol.
3. To evaluate the change in daily patient report of mobility as
measured by visual analog scale.
Hypothesis: We hypothesize that when a standard mobility
protocol is followed, we will see an overall decrease in LOS and
ventilator hours in cardiovascular surgical patients in the ICU. In
addition, those patients will have perceived improved mobility by
ICU discharge.
Study Design
• Describe the design you propose to use
• This is the blueprint for conducting your
study
• Guides the research in planning and
implementing a study
– Maximize control over factors that could interfere
with the validity of the findings
• Control provided by the design increases the
probability that the study results are accurate
reflections of reality
Sample
• Define the selected group of people (or
elements) from which data are collected for
your study
• Consider such characteristics as: age, gender,
race, illness severity, concomitant
conditions/illnesses
• Inclusion criteria: prerequisites for entry
• Exclusion criteria: characteristics to be excluded
(e.g., confounding factors)
Measures/Instruments
• Describe measures or instruments you will
use in your study (use established and tested
measures when available and appropriate)
• Provide rationale for chosen measures
• Provide reliability and validity for measures
Operational Definitions
• Clarify and define the outcomes of interest
(i.e. variables) in your study.
• Specify the operations that you will perform to
measure it (i.e. use an instrument, record a
specific measure from the EMR)
• Consider how the variables have been
measured in the literature
Examples of Operational
Definitions
Variable: Sepsis work-up
Defined as: a compilation of all of the following
tests
– Complete blood count
– C-reactive protein
– Blood culture(s)