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Presentations

The document outlines guidelines for creating an effective presentation, including the structure of the cover slide, introduction, body, and conclusion. It emphasizes the importance of engaging the audience, using original content, and incorporating visual aids while maintaining clarity and relevance. Additionally, it highlights the characteristics of a good presenter and the necessity of editing and proofreading for quality.

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Nhlanhlakazi
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
0 views

Presentations

The document outlines guidelines for creating an effective presentation, including the structure of the cover slide, introduction, body, and conclusion. It emphasizes the importance of engaging the audience, using original content, and incorporating visual aids while maintaining clarity and relevance. Additionally, it highlights the characteristics of a good presenter and the necessity of editing and proofreading for quality.

Uploaded by

Nhlanhlakazi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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PowerPoin • The title (topic)

t • The researchers (compilers) +


Include student numbers
Presentati • The intended audience
• Date of the presentation
on cover
slide
• The purpose of the introduction is to
introduce the topic.
• Firstly, your introduction must start with an
attention grabber. Use one of the these to
fix attention on your topic:
 Rhetorical question
Introducti  Bold statement
 Short anecdote
on • Secondly, in the introduction, you will give
your viewpoint about the topic. Make it a
strong point.
• Thirdly, in the introduction, you will outline
(give a scope) of what points you will be
presenting in the body of your presentation.
• Make sure your content is
relevant to the topic
• Use your own words

The • Keep it short and simple


• Do NOT read the whole
presentation!

Body
• Do not plagiarise (no marks will
be awarded if you copy from the
internet)
• Use in-text references in the
body of your presentation
Substantiate your points with:
• Relevant examples
• Explanations
• Statistics
• Quotes
• Feedback from interview
responses
• Survey outcomes
• Research evidence
• Analysis of an example or an
idea
• The conclusion is a summary

The of what you presented.


• Reflect on what you have
presented.
conclusi • Wrap up your presentation.
• Never present new information
on in the conclusion.
1. The voice
• Audibility (volume)
Presentati • Articulation (how you project
on your voice – speak OUT)
• Pace and tone
aspects to • Clear? Can audience
understand what you are
consider saying?
2. Visual Component
• Incorporate flow-charts; mind-
maps; tables; graphs and pie-
charts.
• Must be appropriate.
• Must provide a logical order to
your presentation.
• Must keep you on track.
• Visual aids must help
summarise the content.
2.1 Content per slide
• Must be minimal.
• Six ideas or bullets per slide.
• Must be clear; slides must
never be confusing.
• Must be in logical order.
3. Characteristics of a good
presenter
• Courtesy and sensitivity
• Energy and patience
• Enthusiasm and knowledge
• Inspiration and motivation
• Flexibility and simplicity
• Warmth and humour
• Honesty and integrity
4. Edit and proofread
• Spelling and grammar is
important.
• Check and check again.
• Edit and proofread your work.

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