There is no general method or formula
which is ‘correct’. You can probably
ignore some of this advice and still do a good presentation… but following it
may well help.
1 Familiarise yourself with the assessment
criteria; notice, for example that whatever your topic, the focus must be
on knowledge issues and that you
should choose a contemporary issue.
2 Choose a concrete topic which interests you
and find the
3 You should be exploring an issue; this
means that you should present different points of view - even if they
contradict each other and even if you disagree with them. You can try to reconcile different points of
view or explain precisely why they are incompatible. You do not have to choose one point of view
as ‘correct’, but you should avoid the rather vacuous ‘so there are different
points of view all of which are equally valid’ approach. Do not be afraid of giving your own opinion;
you can point out that there are problems with your opinion, but be honest and
say what you really think!
4 Try to cover the facts quickly and get on
to the abstract
5 Once you have drawn out the abstract
6 Consider carefully how you communicate the
structure your presentation. It may
be clear in your mind, but the audience may not find it so easy. It can help to have one or two overheads with
the main points in bullet form, using a large font.
7 Try to state explicitly the problems of
knowledge that you are looking at. This
will help you retain clarity and make it easier for an examiner to give you
high marks in criterion A. If you use an
overhead then this is an obvious place to list the problems.
8 If appropriate use a film
clip, slides, photos, newspaper cutting or any other prop. Your presentation will probably be far more
interesting if you can use something other than your voice!
9 In your conclusion try to
summarise (very briefly – one or two sentences) what you have said, and try to
end with a forward-looking view. This
might be a summary of the main principles you have identified or some issues
which have arisen and which have not been answered. Do not just reiterate your arguments. The end should ‘feel’ like a conclusion and
not just be a ‘well that’s it’
10 Don't get hitched with a
loser for a partner.
Written by Nicholas Alchin