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D. E. Koditschek kod@seas.upenn.edu 358 GRW
ESE 290/291 Introduction to Electrical & Systems Engineering Research Methodology & Design Lecture 7: Pitch Your Story (Final Project Presentation) D. E. Koditschek 358 GRW
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Final Oral Presentation (cf. Proposal)
Pitching Environment Context: many ideas; few resources ($, time) …. …. many advances; little insight …. Social Challenge: get them as excited and curious as you; defeat the saboteurs Technical Challenge: identify and summarize the few key ideas Logistics Challenge: cover the ground but talk to the audience Pitch Components intellectual: same as proposal logistical: carefully pruned and organized slides less is more: brief notes to yourself (that make sense to audience “just in time”) localize for audience where you are in the logic [often: take-home notes for potential sponsor] [sometimes: picture or worth 1000 or movie worth words] design: as little as possible white space is good animation can be good (or very, very bad) 21st Century Skill: passion-driven technical pedagogy technical communication: results not easily comprehended; impact even less so envision the best case: meticulous honesty is not incompatible with advised optimism
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This Week’s Assignment
Statement: give a 10 min oral presentation of your completed project pitch: convince potential users of your results (your peers); impress sponsors (present, future) same format as C.4: title + six slides + details (“in case”) strict time limit: earn additional 3 min for generating audience questions presentation due next Tuesday class (4/28); slides due following Thurs., 4/30 Rubric (40 pts = 24 for 6 slides for oral presentation) Slide Content Problem & Motivation: what was/is the missing knowledge or capability? Project: specifically what was attempted? Results: exactly what was accomplished; most important discovery; greatest disappointment Interpretation: how do you know the project has finished (or not)? …. Succeeded (or failed)? Impact: short term (competition); long term (society) Future work (why, how hard?) Slide Structure telegraphic style (bullets; minimal possible words/symbols) outline conveys logical structure of paragraph arguments include “hidden” notes (pacing/timing; reminder of “punch line”) Presentation cover the ground but talk to the audience not the slides crowd control stimulate questions: listeners should be (nearly) as interested and curious as you triage them (quick, direct response; come back at end of talk; don’t know – will find out) stay on point: the minutes belong to you (the outcome belongs to them) DON’T OVERSTAY YOUR WELCOME !!
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Week 12 Assignment Statement: write up a draft technical report
Final refinement of introductory (problem formulation, literature, methods) materials account for critique and suggestions from C.3, C.4, C.5 aim to be finished with introduction to your final report new: statement of principles and techniques actually used scientific/mathematical principles what instruments or methods what data treated in what manner Results section logic: story line data: what, where, visualization: planned – not yet achieved/formatted Appendices old: annotated bibliography new: progress of work detailed report of predicted vs. actual milestones revised calendar or benchmarks with dependencies noted Rubric (35 pts) C.6.1 refine C.3, C5.1 (5) C.6.2 literature review and bibliography (5) C.6.3 progress report (5) C.6.4 scientific and mathematical methods (5) C.6.5 analytical and experimental equipment and facilities (5) C.6.6 data analysis methods (5) C.6.7 results (5)
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Week 8 Assignment Statement: refine project formulation and add a methods section Refinement account for critique and suggestions from C.3 & C.4 aim for near-to-final draft of introduction to your final report Methods section plan of work: schedule of milestones with task dependencies noted data: what, where, how methods: equipment, supplies, tools, instruments; acquisition details Rubric (30 pts) C.5.1 refine C.3 (5) C.5.2 plan of work (5) C.5.3 data base structure (2) C.5.4 data processing (3) C.5.5 scientific, mathematical, statistical processing methods (5) C.5.6 setup (5) C.5.7 sources (5)
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Week 5 Assignment Statement: give a 10 min oral presentation of your proposed project pitch: convince potential sponsor (your peers) to underwrite the work must cover the same ground as C.3: title + six slides + details (“in case”) strict time limit: earn additional 3 min for generating audience questions presentation due next Tuesday class (3/3); slides due following Thursday (3/5) Rubric (25 pts = 12 for 6 slides for oral presentation) Slide Content Target: what is the missing knowledge or capability? Gap: show it is really missing Project: exactly what work is needed Refutability: how will you know the project has succeeded or failed? Means: how would one go about applying those measurements? Prioritized Bibliography (complete, but emphasize crucial sources) Slide Structure telegraphic style (bullets; minimal possible words/symbols) outline conveys logical structure of paragraph arguments include “hidden” notes (pacing/timing; reminder of “punch line”) Presentation cover the ground but talk to the audience not the slides crowd control stimulate questions: listeners should be (nearly) as interested and curious as you triage them (quick, direct response; come back at end of talk; don’t know – will find out) stay on point: the minutes belong to you (the outcome belongs to them) DON’T OVERSTAY YOUR WELCOME !!
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Week 3-4 Assignment Statement: write a problem formulation
combine sponsor’s ideas with literature identify a compelling area for advancement propose a specific research project to close gap support all statements via citations to annotated bibliography Rubric (20 pts for ~5 paragraphs + bibliography) Target: what is the missing knowledge or capability? could be entirely new – or include some of prior C.1 & C.2 writing must cite all statements using high quality sources of authority some old lit; likely some new; all to be presented in bibliography Gap: show it is really missing best to find some recent publication that states so use annotated bibliography to establish how you searched for gap-closing successors with no success Project: exactly what work is needed propose concrete design or knowledge step to address the gap strive for concise focus, detail, clarity Refutability: how will you know the project has succeeded or failed? must be able to assess whether the proposed work truly shrinks the gap measurement for experimental project; analysis for applied math project Means: how would one go about applying those measurements? as great detail as possible: mock table with labeled rows and columns for blank entries start planning now for any supplies, equipment, tools, etc Annotated Bibliography: same rubric as for C.2 (likely some new entries)
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Week 2 Assignment Literature Review Problem Statement
write a brief review using high quality sources to document project importance and your way forward features one general review (importance & state of the art) and one focused technical paper (next step) use cited and citing papers to corroborate and bolster your understanding paragraph structure of review + annotated bibliography motivation: vivid and specific description of what is needed and what impact it would have state-of-the-art: appraisal of 2 – 3 most important recent publications technical approach: logical next step toward targeted advance surrounding literature: precursors (cited) and successors (citing) of featured papers helpful vs unhelpful results of naïve search open problems: alternative “next steps” annotated bibliography Annotated Bibliography complete citation (following some archival journal format, including live link) evidence of quality (venue, authors, publication) relevance (a few sentences of annotation showing you’ve “read” the paper) what is the paper about? what sort of contribution does it make to the literature? how does it relate to your topic or inform your project?
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Week 1 Assignment Source Acquisition Problem Statement
Find two high quality sources from the relevant scientific literature summarizing the state of the art in your general technical area thereby exposing technology or capability gap Use their insight to find two different motivating sources they‘ve (almost surely) motivated the importance of the gap you‘re to verify by finding cited (or citing) motivating publications Suggested Problem Approach Start with your sponsor’s suggested papers (or simply Google/Wiki/GS) Go to GS and find some other likely high quality publications Look up those papers in Scopus to find your review articles use their cited and citing publications (and recursively so as needed) to look for the most recent highly cited review-style publications Use review articles to find high impact corroborating motivation Your job: provide evidence that your authors, papers, and venues are high quality impact factor of venue; publication citation count; author h-index show intellectual resilience in the face of inevitable obstacles The publication is very new so there are very few citing pubs – but the venue and author(s) are clearly great The publication is very new and so are the authors – but the venue is great and the institutions are reassuring There are too few publications in this area (give evidence by reporting some details of how you searched)
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