Presentation
- Due Nov 24, 2025 by 11:59pm
- Points 10
- Submitting a website url, a media recording, or a file upload
- Available until Nov 24, 2025 at 11:59pm
Access our Presentations here
We will deliver our research in recorded presentations of 5–10 minutes. Presenting is a common academic practice that blends speech with visuals to communicate research findings. Presentations, like the associated Research Papers, are rhetorically composed to guide the audience to a particular point. Presentations should refer to other studies to situate the work in its research conversation.
Presenters should not read their completed papers; they should shape their material to match the situation. You can record your screen as well as use a camera and microphone, and excellent Presentations will make use of these capabilities to create work that is informative, cohesive, and within the time parameters. It is common to use slides when presenting, but it is not required. (We will read articles from folks who even argue that the detriments of stereotypical slide-driven presentations outweigh their benefits.) You might use other kinds of visuals, ranging from diagrams and data displays to whiteboard demonstrations. Do what you believe best communicates your findings to your audience, which is your fellow classmates and your instructor.
Presentations may be submitted as files or links, or they may be directly recorded into Canvas. All submitted Presentations will be made available to the class. You have many ways to create your recorded Presentation (options will be addressed in class video discussions):
- Your personal Zoom room
- The university's Panopto Links to an external site. video system
- PowerPoint's recording features Links to an external site.
- Keynote's recording features Links to an external site.
- Your smartphone
- Canvas's built-in Media Recording feature
You also have access to several tools than can be used to augment Presentations (options will be addressed in class video discussions):
Find Rubric