Presentation technique

A presentation is the process of
presenting a topic to an audience. It is typically a demonstration, lecture, or
speech meant to inform, persuade, or build good will. The term can also be used
for a formal or ritualized introduction or offering, as with the presentation
of a debutante.

Oral Presentation
An oral presentation is a short talk on
a set topic given to a tutorial or seminar group. In an oral presentation one
(or more) students give a talk to a tutorial group and present views on a topic
based on their readings or research. The rest of the group then joins in a
discussion of the topic. Presentation topics are usually scheduled early in the
semester. You may be able to choose your topic or one may be allocated to you.
If you are able to choose a topic, select the one that you have some questions
about and that interests you the most. Your presentation may be given as an
individual or as part of a group. In some courses the oral presentation may be
the basis for a written assignment. Examples of oral presentation include:
Lecture
A lecture is most often used to
describe a method of teaching, particularly popular in college, where
professors give organized talks as lessons to large groups of students. It is
not quite as positive when children level the term at their parents — “Don’t
lecture me!” — for criticizing their clothes, their friends or
their music. Lecture can also be used to describe any public talk, most
often by an expert.
Group Discussion
Group
Discussion
is a novel way to assess person’s personality. It is both a
technique and an art to judge the capacity of the person and his aptness for
the job.
Group
Discussion is a modern method of assessing students’ personality. It is both a
technique and an art and a comprehensive tool to judge the worthiness of the
student and his appropriateness for responsibilities. It is a qualitative
method to obtain in-depth information on concepts and perceptions about a
certain topic through spontaneous group discussion of approximately 6-12
persons, guided by a facilitator.
Talk shop
It is all about to talk about your job with those you work with when not at work; even at a party they
have to talk
shop. People who work together
talk shop; they
talk about their
work when they
are not at work.  It can be
someone who studies what you do and you spent the
whole night or day or hour talking shop.
Teaching
Teaching
means interaction of teacher and students. They participate for their mutual
benefits. Both have their own objective and target is to achieve them.
Teaching includes all the activities of
providing education to other. The person who provides education is called
teacher. The teacher uses different method for giving best knowledge to his
students. He tries his best to make the students understand him. His duty is to
encourage students to learn the subjects.
Tutorial
A
tutorial is a teaching session
given to one student or a small group of students. If you are stuck in a class,
you could use a tutorial.
Teachers
lead classes, but tutors are educators who also help students, usually
one-on-one. Tutors don’t give grades; they just try to help or coach students.
A session given by a tutor is called a tutorial. A tutorial could be a
one-on-one session in a tutoring centre or elsewhere. A tutorial could also be
a small group led by a tutor, in which the tutor helps the whole group with
specified topic.
Speechmaking
This has to do with delivering an address to a public
audience; “people came to see the candidates and hear the speechmaking
Poster Presentation
A poster session or poster
presentation
is the presentation of research information by an
individual or representatives of research teams at a congress or conference
with an academic or professional focus. 
A poster presentation advertises your project. It
combines text and graphics to present your project in a way that is visually
interesting and accessible. It allows you to display your work to a large group
of other scholars and to talk to and receive feedback from interested viewers.
Poster sessions have been very common in the hard sciences for some time, and
they have recently become more popular as forums for the presentation of
research in other disciplines like the social sciences, service learning, and
the humanities.
Poster
presentation formats differ from discipline to discipline, but in every case, a
poster should clearly articulate what you did, how you did it, why you did it,
and what it contributes to your field and the larger field of human knowledge.
Chart
A chart is a graphical representation of data, in which “the
data is represented by symbols, such as bars in a bar chart, lines in a line
chart, or slices in a pie chart”. A chart can represent tabular numeric
data, functions or some kinds of qualitative structure and provides different
information. Charts are often used to ease understanding of large quantities of
data and the relationships between parts of the data. Charts can usually be
read more quickly than the raw data that they are produced from. They are used
in a wide variety of fields, and can be created by hand (often on graph paper)
or by computer using a charting application. Certain types of charts are more
useful for presenting a given data set than others. For example, data that presents
percentages in different groups (such as “satisfied, not satisfied, and
unsure”) are often displayed in a pie chart, but may be more easily
understood when presented in a horizontal bar chart.  On the other hand, data that represents
numbers that change over a period of time (such as “annual revenue from
2004 to 2014”) might be best shown as a line chart.
Electronic
presentations
The aim of using electronic
presentations in the learning process is to have at the same time different
communication levels in a document or product, so that learners can enhance
their creativity skills by using those different means to express a topic or
argumentation. Examples include; PowerPoint, Video, Film, Multimedia,
Television etc.
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