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What you can control and what you cannot control… Chetan Tiwari Sean Tierney Steve Wolverton UNT Department of Geography Academic Conference Networking.

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Presentation on theme: "What you can control and what you cannot control… Chetan Tiwari Sean Tierney Steve Wolverton UNT Department of Geography Academic Conference Networking."— Presentation transcript:

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2 What you can control and what you cannot control… Chetan Tiwari Sean Tierney Steve Wolverton UNT Department of Geography Academic Conference Networking for Professional Success

3 You are not alone! Chronicle of Higher Education

4 Submitting papers Approach your mentors and other experts – Organized sessions – Gambling on placement www.aims-international.org

5 The Title Contrast these two titles – “Sanitary landfills in Denton, Texas” – “Location matters for sanitary landfills: an example” swamplot.com

6 Abstracting Abstract appropriately – Don’t simply summarize – Point out the impact of your work to experts – See handout scienceblogs.com

7 Preconference networking Be proactive, but also polite – Send your abstract to your anticipated audience – Assume experts are nice people www.getentrepreneurial.com

8 Example email Dear Dr. Expert: I read your recent paper in the Journal of Expert Science, and it helped me frame some of my own ideas. I am presenting a paper at the Association of Expert Scientists conference in May, and I have attached a copy of the abstract. I would like to make your acquaintance at the conference and to buy you a cup of coffee. – Sincerely, Rufus

9 Preconference networking Seek out opportunities Go on field trips Volunteer, perhaps Make colleagues mgmoses.com

10 At the conference Network, network, network! – Academic opportunities Meet key academics and listen to them Introduce yourself and tell them your elevator story Invite them to your talk – tell them where & when You may be invited to – Guest lectures – Visit a campus or a lab – Participate in a project – Become a reviewer

11 At the conference Network, network, network! – Academic opportunities Meet other graduate students Be part of specialty groups (or take on an administrative position) Look for graduate student councils Dress well (and don’t wear a cap!)

12 At the conference Network, network, network! – Job opportunities Career boards Company tables & booths Remember, you are talking directly to a potential recruiter Take copies of your resume Give your business card and take theirs Makes notes

13 At the conference At the presentation – Similar topics – Approach co-presenters: introduce yourself, hand out your business card – Listen and build on work of previous speakers – Make sure you provide contact information – build a website; make your PPT available online – Be sure your presentation works as intended (Mac vs. Windows). Use PDFs.

14 At the conference Breakfast! – Get up early and have breakfast! – Good time to have a short, informal chat – Do not hesitate to join bigger groups Lunch! – Many people have commitments – There are also people who don’t! – Build your network of fellow graduate students – Take your tag off outside

15 At the conference Dinner – Look for special events (sometime they are free!) – And, don’t drink too much (especially if someone else is paying!)

16 At the conference Others – Make sure you follow-up: someone may have asked for a paper, or a copy of your PPT, … – Take some time to visit places. Take a conference organized tour if there is one.

17 A really ineffective slide Today we want to establish a loose environment to offer you a detailed perspective on what the conference experience often is and can become. We will cover topics from how to choose a conference, to how to prepare a presentation, to how to network, to how to think of funding opportunities. Really, what we are trying to get at are the do’s and do nots of conferences not from a geographic perspective, but from a professional perspective. We hope that you gain from the presentation. Along the way, if you have questions, ask them. This is an example of a terrible slide, and if you are still awake by the end… you get the point. Peace out!

18 Where do you want their attention Bullet points – Provide structure You provide the substance – Keywords and phrases You want your audience to look at you – Not the screen – Not at the conference program – Nor their phones Remember to look to your audience – Not at the screen

19 Color and font coordination Using a font color that does not contrast with the background color is hard to read Using color for decoration is: – Distracting and annoying. Using a different color for each point is unnecessary – Using a different color for secondary points demonstrates you have way too much time on your hands. Trying to be creative can also be bad Is your font big enough for all – Not just people in the front row

20 The suspense is not captivating OK, I have something to say Bet you want to know what it is Psych, not this time Not this time either OK, I have a secret Knock, Knock Who’s there? Nobody Nobody who? ……………. (get it?)

21 If you must use animation..be consistent He hits a fly ball To deep left field Its going back Back.. And its caught on the warning track And he’s out! And I’m dizzy!

22 An effective use of transitions

23 Cool picture But what is my point Are you sure your audience can read it???

24 Industrial Agriculture Historical productivity of farmers – 1900: 20 people – 1950: 75 people – Today: 150 people

25 Background – Bad Avoid backgrounds that are distracting or difficult to read from Always be consistent with the background that you use

26 Don’t make your audience guess

27 What would Sigmund Freud think?

28 Proff reed you’re sideshow Spell right and do good grammer – Nothing discredits you fasster than then riting like a 3 rd grader – Don’t thrust spill-chick Avoid don’t use extra repeated additional words text u r oblgtd to spll evrythg out. – Twitter wrtg not accptbl. English is your second language? – seek help

29 Substance Practice – In the mirror – In front of friends / colleagues / advisor Timing – Don’t try and fill the entire time slot People love short and sweet – Ensure you leave time for questions Slide Maximum – What is appropriate (10 for a 20 minute talk)

30 A simple rule Academic writing is not a ‘who dun it’ If they are bored at the beginning – They will have checked out by the end So – Tell ‘em what you’re going to tell ‘em – Tell ‘em – And then, Tell ‘em what you told ‘em

31 Conclusion Simplicity – Paragraphs provide napping opportunities – Omit bells and whistles Objectives are “eyes on you” & “ears on you” – Pictures good, words bad – Slide limits – Don’t trust spell-check – Color schemes; fonts, et cetera Know the conference operating system – Use pdf format

32 Potential crises & disappointments What if you mess up in your presentation? – Relax, and keep going… What if you get criticized… by an angry expert? – You should not argue, you may not know… – Suggest that you talk after the presentation What if you spill coffee on an expert? – Try not to… What if you throw up?


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