mathematicians must speak: the dos and don'ts of giving effective mathematical presentations

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Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations Gerda de Vries Department of Math & Stat Sciences University of Alberta

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Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations. Gerda de Vries Department of Math & Stat Sciences University of Alberta. “Mathematical communication, both written and spoken, is the filter through which your mathematical work is viewed. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Mathematicians Must Speak:The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving

Effective Mathematical Presentations

Gerda de VriesDepartment of Math & Stat Sciences

University of Alberta

Page 2: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

“Mathematical communication, both written and spoken, is the filter through which your mathematical work is viewed.

If you do mathematics purely for your own pleasure, then there is no reason to write about it. If you hope to share the beauty of the mathematics you have done, then it is not sufficient to simple write; you must strive to write well.”

Ashley Reiter, web.mit.edu/jrickert/www/mathadvice.html

Page 3: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Helpful Advice?

Tell them what you are going to say, say it,

then tell them what you said.

Page 4: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Let’s hear some of your questions about giving mathematical

presentations …

Page 5: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Outline

• Introduction – Focus on essentials• Main Points – DOs and DON’Ts• Closing – Concluding thoughts

Page 6: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Why Must Mathematicians Speak?

• To share new research results with the scientific community

• To trigger new discussions, insights, and collaborations

• To let others know what it is that we do, why our work is important or exciting

We must speak for the same reason that we must write:

Page 7: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Some Questions From Me to You: From the Perspective of the Audience

• How is reading a mathematical text (journal article or book) different from listening to a mathematical seminar presentation?

• What information do you wish to get out of a mathematical text?

• What information do you wish to get out of a seminar presentation?

Page 8: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

From the Perspective of the Presenter

• As a presenter, you need to help your audience get the take-home message(s)!

• Focussing on the needs of your audience incidentally directs your energies away from worrying about yourself.

Page 9: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

In a Nutshell:How to Help Your Audience

• Placing your presentation in a scientific/historical context

• Clear statement of the objectives & conclusions• Signposting to convey presentation structure• Eliminating unnecessary detail• Carrying your audience: review definitions and

symbology; give illustrative examples of dense statements; talk the audience through graphs, etc.

Page 10: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

When Must Mathematicians Speak?

When there is a story to tell …

Stories come in many different forms:• Literature review on a specific topic• Announcement of a new result• Introduction to who you are, what area of

research you work on, what methods you use

Page 11: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

All Mathematical Stories

• … have a setting • … have a plot • … have characters

Setting: scientific and/or historical context

Plot: problem statement and conclusion

Characters: variables, equations, objects such as groups, function spaces, etc.

Page 12: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Questions to Think AboutWhen Putting Your Research

Story Together• What motivates my research? Why am I

doing this? Why should anyone else care?• What is the significance of my results?• Who else has done related work? How

does my research relate to published works? How does my work fit in with others?

Page 13: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Outline

• Introduction – Focus on essentials• Main Points – DOs and DON’Ts• Closing – Concluding thoughts

Page 14: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Capturing the Audience’s Attention

• You need a “hook” to capture your listener’s attention right from the start.

• Tell them about the important problem you will be discussing.

• Place your presentation in the scientific/historical context that is meaningful for your listeners by providing a concise introduction to the background of your problem.

Scientists Must Speak, page 9.

Page 15: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Clear Statement of the Objectives

Page 16: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Clear Statement of the Conclusions

Page 17: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Signposting: Giving Structure to Your Presentation

• Signposts are aids that let the listener know where you are in the story and when you’re moving to a new stage in your presentation.

• Signposts can take many different forms: outlines, questions and answers, partial summaries, “where next” type comments, etc.

Image source: www.vanderbilt.edu/HRS/guide/contract/stII2.htm

Page 18: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Where’s the Signpost?

Page 19: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Where’s the Signpost?

Page 20: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Where’s the Signpost?

Page 21: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Simplify Your Slides

ReplaceA = randsvd([10,16],1e2)

withA is a 10x16 matrix, with random entries

Excellent examples of slides before and after simplification can be found in Handbook of Writing for the Mathematical Sciences.

Page 22: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Eliminating Unnecessary Detail• Resist the temptation to tell the audience

everything you know about the subject.• Don’t bury the key points in detailed

descriptions of methods or proofs.

Annoyance: what is the point of this talk?

Bewilderment: what is the point of this talk?

Boredom: what is the point of this talk?

Scientists Must Speak, page 7.

Page 23: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Proofs?

• The beautiful details of a clever proof may detract from the main story line of your presentation.

• Remember, beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

• The appropriate place for the exposition of a a proof generally is a journal article.

Page 24: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Did I Say You Cannot Include Proofs?

No! If you need to talk about a proof of a theorem in the course of your presentation, you have a number of options:

• Outlining the steps of a proof, skimming over common steps, and highlighting those steps that required clever insight on your part.

• Verbally sketching the main ideas of the proof.

Page 25: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Dense Statements:Losing your Audience

Theoremk is an even perfect number if and only if it has the form 2n-1(2n-1) and 2n-1 is prime.

ProofSuppose first that  p = 2k-1 is a prime number, and …

Page 26: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Carrying Your Audience:Review Essential Definitions

Recall: A positive integer n is called a perfect number if it is equal to the sum of all its positive divisors, excluding n itself.

The first two perfect numbers are 6 and 28:6 = 1 + 2 + 3

28 = 1 + 2 + 4 + 7 + 14

Page 27: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Carrying Your Audience:Include Illustrative Examples

of Dense StatementsThe statement of the theorem pertains to the factoring of even perfect numbers into the form 2n-1(2n-1), where 2n-1 is prime.

We can check that the statement of the theorem holds for the first two perfect numbers:

6 = 2(3) = 21(22-1) = 2n-1(2n-1) for n=228 = 4(7) = 22(23-1) = 2n-1(2n-1) for n=3

Page 28: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Carrying Your Audience:Describe Graphs, Charts, and Tables

• Label all your axes.• Describe the axes

verbally as well.• Discuss the interesting

features of the graph: what can we conclude from the graph?

Page 29: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Funky Colour Schemes?

• People have no trouble reading dark text on a light background.

• Some people have trouble reading light text on a dark background.

• Also be consistent in your background – changing the background picture from slide to slide can be distracting.

Page 30: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Use Color Effectively

Page 31: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Do I Need to Use Fancy Visual Aids?

No!

Use whatever medium you are comfortable with – blackboard, overheads, powerpoint, slitex, beamer, etc., or a combination thereof.

As long as your take-home message comes through loud and clear, the medium you use is irrelevant.

Page 32: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Can or Should I Read My Slides?

• Preferably not.• If you really must, then at least have the text in

point form, and give the audience time to absorb the information in each point.

Page 33: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

This is Not a Good Idea!

Page 34: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Abbreviations?

• Avoid abbreviations as much as possible.• If you must use abbreviations in your slides,

at least use the full name in your speech.

Page 35: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Summarize Your Presentation

End your presentation strongly:• State a concise, positively worded, solid

conclusion that summarizes and reinforces your take-home message.

Scientists Must Speak, page 14.

Page 36: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Outline

• Introduction – Focus on essentials• Main Points – DOs and DON’Ts• Closing – Concluding thoughts

Page 37: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Advice 1: Learn From Others

• What was the speaker’s main result/point? How did the speaker support this main result/point?

• Did I get lost? When, and why?• In the presentation that I just heard, what

worked for me and what did not?

After you’ve attended a presentation, ask yourself the following questions:

Page 38: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Advice 2: Developing the Story of Your Research

• Talk to your peers, your supervisor, other professors about the context of your research.

• Create one-page summaries of papers you read, abstracting the essence of the paper, and writing a few lines about how the research relates to your own research.

Page 39: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Advice 3: Start Early,and Practice, Practice, Practice!

• Storyboard your presentation.• Practice the first draft of your presentation

in front of other members of your group.• Ask for feedback, and be open to feedback.• Revise your presentation.• Practice your talk in privacy, with a timer.

Page 40: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

Talks Should Be Stimulating

• Pay attention to the setting: what is the scientific or historical context of your topic?

• Pay attention to the plot: every presentation must have an objective, or take-home message.

• Pay attention to the characters: carry your audience by properly introducing listeners to variables, definitions, etc.

Page 41: Mathematicians Must Speak: The DOs and DON'Ts of Giving Effective Mathematical Presentations

References

• Scientists must speak: bringing presentations to life, D.E. Walters and G.C. Walters, Taylor and Francis, 2002

• Handbook of Writing for the Mathematical Sciences, N.J. Higham, SIAM Press, 1998