Date: Thu, 17 Apr 2008 17:42:58 +0100 From: Frank Mitchell <mitchell@wyatt672earp.force9.co.uk> To: freebsd-advocacy@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Help with a presentation. Message-ID: <200804171742.58735.mitchell@wyatt672earp.force9.co.uk> In-Reply-To: <e8b5dfd50804160645v6385dabbo80751bf330d8296c@mail.gmail.com> References: <e8b5dfd50804160645v6385dabbo80751bf330d8296c@mail.gmail.com>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Hi FreeBSD Advocates: I used to give talks about computers among other things, so maybe I can contribute. Obviously the usual approach is to talk about a series of slides. But you don't need a Slide Projector if you can overcome the usual Stage Fright. One useful technique for organising your material is the Spider-Chart. A bloke named Tony Buzan wrote books about these, calling them Mind-Maps or Brain-Patterns, but the idea is much older. You start with a large sheet of paper, like a double-spread of Line-Printer output, and you write the central theme in the centre. Then you draw lines branching out to the main topics, then further branches out to further associated ideas, with interconnecting links between them. After collecting your thoughts this way you organise them into a sequential list for your Computer Talk. The Spider-Chart is ideal for a subject like Computing, because the more abstract the material is, the better it works. It's also good in Group Discussions. If everybody draws up a Spider-Chart you get an instant picture of the different perspectives people have on a subject. Your talk can become alot simpler if you encourage Audience Participation. Just read a brief Introduction or Summary and ask whether anybody has any questions already. It's alot less daunting to talk to a single member of the audience than to address the whole crowd simultaneously. You may find the whole occasion takes on a life of its own, with the audience doing half your talk for you. Obviously you need an excuse for questions you can't answer, like explaining you're also researching what people want to know about. You can note down on all the topics you didn't think of and check them out for your next presentation. You still need to go back to your prepared notes occasionally when the debate dies away. You can find alot of your material has been covered and you need to pick out the bits nobody thought of yet. Just go through the next topic briefly and ask if there are any more questions again. You need this feedback anyway, otherwise you risk going on without being understood by half your audience. If there is any misunderstanding, that gives you more stuff to discuss. At the end you can discover that you kept people interested for three hours and only used half your material. Faictz Ce Que Vouldras: Frank Mitchell On Wednesday 16 April 2008 14:45:49 TooMany Secrets wrote: > Hi! > > I need to make a "freebsd advocacy" presentation this weekend into the > BSDCon Barcelona'08. The problem is that I never make a presentation > for anything :-( > Anybody could help me with ideas? > One of the points i would like to explain is the fact that FreeBSD is > in more companies that the people would be think, but I would like to > talk about other examples (not the typical Yahoo, Juniper, etc). > Excuse me if you can't understand what I would to say, my english is > very bad... > > Thank you very much!! > -- > Have a nice day ;-) > TooManySecrets >
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?200804171742.58735.mitchell>