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Free, Downloadable Lecture Slides for Educators and Students
Published on October 8, 2021 by Tegan George and Julia Merkus. Revised on July 23, 2023.
We have adapted several of our most popular articles into lecture slides that you can use to teach your students about a variety of academic topics.
Scribbr slides are free to use, customize, and distribute for educational purposes.
Table of contents
Introduction to literature reviews.
- Writing a research paper
- Structuring a dissertation
- Writing an essay
- APA 7th edition changes
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Other interesting articles, frequently asked questions about scribbr lecture slides.
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Ten smart ways to ace your next academic presentation
Using examples and practical tips, Dorsa Amir explains the techniques that ensure your presentation communicates its message effectively – from slide design to structuring your talk
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As a presenter, your main job is to guide the audience through your argument in the clearest, most engaging, most efficient way possible. You must respect the audience’s time and attention. This means being mindful of how long your presentation is, what you’re including in your slides, and importantly, how it is all packaged and presented.
A great presenter is one who is intentional: each element in the presentation serves a clear function and is intended to support the audience’s understanding of the content.
Here are 10 tips to keep in mind to ensure your presentation hits the mark
1. Any time you put something on your slides, its primary purpose is to help the audience, not you
Many presenters will add copious text or other elements to help themselves remember points they want to make. However, this is usually less helpful for the audience (most of this information belongs in presenter notes, and not on the slides). Think of yourself like a director of a movie. What do you want the audience to focus on at any given moment? What features on your slides will enhance the verbal point you are making and which will distract from it? Be intentional about what you include on your slides, and only include elements that serve a clear and helpful function for the audience.
2. Condense text to the main question or key points of the slide
It may be tempting to write out snippets of the script wholesale and add them to the slides, but this often results in PowerPoint karaoke, where the audience is simply watching you read the text out loud to them. While text is certainly useful for helping to concretise points or make slides more accessible, be judicious about what you include. Each slide should make one or two clear points. It’s better to have more slides with less content than fewer slides that are jam-packed. Of course, the amount of text you include will also be determined by the type of presentation you are giving. If students will be using your slides as a study aid, for example, you may want to include more information than if you are creating a research talk for a conference.
3. Avoid using too many colours, fonts or animations
Consider elements such as fonts, colours and animations as tools in your presentation toolkit. These elements should be used sparingly and only when they serve a clear purpose. I’m sure you’ve all attended a talk with colours bright enough to burn your retinas or crammed with “fun” fonts such as Comic Sans. Try to refrain from doing that. Animations that allow certain elements to appear or disappear along with your presentation — such as bullet points that appear as you say them — can help direct the attention of the audience. Colour contrasts are primarily helpful for visual segmentation or bringing attention to particular elements. Fonts, colours or flashy animations that are purely decorative are more distracting than helpful.
4. Avoid colour combinations that are hard to read
Be mindful of how colours interact with each other to either facilitate or inhibit comprehension. White text on black (or the reverse) is often a safe bet. Don’t overdecorate! (See above).
5. If you’re showing a graph, orient the audience to the axes before plotting the data and make sure they can actually see all of it
I typically show the axes and labels first, making sure to orient everyone to the variables and how they are going to be visualised, and then I reveal the data. This ensures that everyone understands how to interpret the visualisation they are about to see. It is also helpful to restate the key prediction and tell the audience what they should expect to see if the prediction is true, and then plot the data. Use large sizes and clear fonts. I’ve heard way too many people say things like: “You probably can’t read this but…” To that, I want to say: “But you’re the one making the slide! You did this to us!” Don’t be that person.
6. Use high-resolution images or videos
This is especially true for presentations that will be projected onto a larger surface. If it’s fuzzy on your computer screen, it will look even fuzzier when magnified and projected. Try to integrate high-resolution images and vector graphics to avoid this. When your images contain text, delete those portions and re-enter the text in text boxes that will scale up much more clearly when magnified.
7. When illustrating results, identify one or two key graphs to make your point
The temptation is often to show the audience every single result you found, but this dilutes the overall message you are trying to send. There’s no need to visualise everything: you should focus on the key graphs that tell most or all of the story. If you have built up the presentation in the right way, when the audience see your data visualisation, they will immediately understand what you found and whether it supports your hypothesis. That’s how clear and accessible the graph should be.
8. Don’t overload the audience with unnecessary complex jargon or acronyms
Every time you introduce a new term or a brand new acronym (BNA), you are asking the audience to do you a favour and commit this new item to working memory. The audience doesn’t know your presentation; they don’t know what’s going to be important later and what isn’t. They’re trusting that you are only presenting information to them that is relevant and they’re doing their best to follow along. Make this process as easy and enjoyable as possible for them. Be judicious with what you ask them to remember or commit to memory. If you can explain a concept without jargon, avoid the jargon!
9. Enhance accessibility
The Web Accessibility Initiative has a great set of guidelines that I will summarise here. Use easy-to-read fonts in large sizes. Make sure there is enough contrast between colours to make them discernible. When giving virtual talks, consider turning on automatic closed captioning. If it’s feasible, provide annotated slide handouts. During the presentation itself, speak clearly and loudly, avoiding unnecessarily complex vocabulary or culturally specific idioms. Where possible, use a microphone. You should also try to verbally describe pertinent parts of visual information on your slides, such as graphics or videos.
10. Use outline slides and marker slides to segment information
Research shows that we understand and remember information better when it comes in bite-size pieces; think of chapters in a book. To incorporate this structure into your talk, break apart the presentation into smaller pieces. Always incorporate an outline slide that previews the structure of the talk and gives the audience a sense of what to expect. Also, use marker slides to communicate that a new section is beginning. And make sure to wrap up each section with a summary slide.
Dorsa Amir is a postdoc in the department of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley.
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Princeton Correspondents on Undergraduate Research
How to Make a Successful Research Presentation
Turning a research paper into a visual presentation is difficult; there are pitfalls, and navigating the path to a brief, informative presentation takes time and practice. As a TA for GEO/WRI 201: Methods in Data Analysis & Scientific Writing this past fall, I saw how this process works from an instructor’s standpoint. I’ve presented my own research before, but helping others present theirs taught me a bit more about the process. Here are some tips I learned that may help you with your next research presentation:
More is more
In general, your presentation will always benefit from more practice, more feedback, and more revision. By practicing in front of friends, you can get comfortable with presenting your work while receiving feedback. It is hard to know how to revise your presentation if you never practice. If you are presenting to a general audience, getting feedback from someone outside of your discipline is crucial. Terms and ideas that seem intuitive to you may be completely foreign to someone else, and your well-crafted presentation could fall flat.
Less is more
Limit the scope of your presentation, the number of slides, and the text on each slide. In my experience, text works well for organizing slides, orienting the audience to key terms, and annotating important figures–not for explaining complex ideas. Having fewer slides is usually better as well. In general, about one slide per minute of presentation is an appropriate budget. Too many slides is usually a sign that your topic is too broad.
Limit the scope of your presentation
Don’t present your paper. Presentations are usually around 10 min long. You will not have time to explain all of the research you did in a semester (or a year!) in such a short span of time. Instead, focus on the highlight(s). Identify a single compelling research question which your work addressed, and craft a succinct but complete narrative around it.
You will not have time to explain all of the research you did. Instead, focus on the highlights. Identify a single compelling research question which your work addressed, and craft a succinct but complete narrative around it.
Craft a compelling research narrative
After identifying the focused research question, walk your audience through your research as if it were a story. Presentations with strong narrative arcs are clear, captivating, and compelling.
- Introduction (exposition — rising action)
Orient the audience and draw them in by demonstrating the relevance and importance of your research story with strong global motive. Provide them with the necessary vocabulary and background knowledge to understand the plot of your story. Introduce the key studies (characters) relevant in your story and build tension and conflict with scholarly and data motive. By the end of your introduction, your audience should clearly understand your research question and be dying to know how you resolve the tension built through motive.
- Methods (rising action)
The methods section should transition smoothly and logically from the introduction. Beware of presenting your methods in a boring, arc-killing, ‘this is what I did.’ Focus on the details that set your story apart from the stories other people have already told. Keep the audience interested by clearly motivating your decisions based on your original research question or the tension built in your introduction.
- Results (climax)
Less is usually more here. Only present results which are clearly related to the focused research question you are presenting. Make sure you explain the results clearly so that your audience understands what your research found. This is the peak of tension in your narrative arc, so don’t undercut it by quickly clicking through to your discussion.
- Discussion (falling action)
By now your audience should be dying for a satisfying resolution. Here is where you contextualize your results and begin resolving the tension between past research. Be thorough. If you have too many conflicts left unresolved, or you don’t have enough time to present all of the resolutions, you probably need to further narrow the scope of your presentation.
- Conclusion (denouement)
Return back to your initial research question and motive, resolving any final conflicts and tying up loose ends. Leave the audience with a clear resolution of your focus research question, and use unresolved tension to set up potential sequels (i.e. further research).
Use your medium to enhance the narrative
Visual presentations should be dominated by clear, intentional graphics. Subtle animation in key moments (usually during the results or discussion) can add drama to the narrative arc and make conflict resolutions more satisfying. You are narrating a story written in images, videos, cartoons, and graphs. While your paper is mostly text, with graphics to highlight crucial points, your slides should be the opposite. Adapting to the new medium may require you to create or acquire far more graphics than you included in your paper, but it is necessary to create an engaging presentation.
The most important thing you can do for your presentation is to practice and revise. Bother your friends, your roommates, TAs–anybody who will sit down and listen to your work. Beyond that, think about presentations you have found compelling and try to incorporate some of those elements into your own. Remember you want your work to be comprehensible; you aren’t creating experts in 10 minutes. Above all, try to stay passionate about what you did and why. You put the time in, so show your audience that it’s worth it.
For more insight into research presentations, check out these past PCUR posts written by Emma and Ellie .
— Alec Getraer, Natural Sciences Correspondent
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50 Creative Ideas to Nail Your College Presentation
We’d be willing to bet that most college students enjoy presentations about as much as they like their 7am class. Whether they’re designing them, or in the audience, there are likely a million and one things they’d rather be doing (like napping in their dorm room). In fact, 79% will say that most presentations today suck. And 35% of millennials say that they will only engage with content they feel has a great story or theme. With a reputation like that, it’s no wonder students avoid presentations at all costs.
As a result, many will end up procrastinating, losing sleep over choosing a topic, and piecing a deck together at the last minute. According to research, 47% of presenters put in more than eight hours into designing their presentations. You do the math. Eight hours at the eleventh hour equals an all-nighter.
Luckily, that doesn’t mean the final product has to be a poorly thought-out frankendeck.
Creative presentation ideas for college students
A lot can ride on a class presentation. It might be your last project at the end of the semester that determines the fate of your final grade, or maybe it’s a group project that counts for half of your participation in the class. Whatever the stakes are, we’re here to help you nail your next college presentation.
Pick the right topic
Before committing to your topics for presentations in college, you should consider things like what excites you, what you’re knowledgeable in and what you’d be interested in learning more about, books or movies that inspire you, world events, buzz-worthy pop culture, and what topics relate to your class course. How can you apply these things to your next class presentation?
You’re in college, so it’s very likely that your classmates will be sleeping, or staring out the window, while you’re presenting at the front of the room. To keep them engaged, make it interesting with these unique college presentation ideas.
College presentation ideas
- The evolution of a specific product— like the cell phone
- A presentation on your favorite celebrity
- A history of the most influential presidents of the United States
- How modern medicine is made
- The highest paid [BLANK] in 2021
- A how-to presentation on something you’re passionate about— like building cars
- A book that you think should be made into a movie (and why)
- Your favorite cultural recipe
- Who built the Sphinx of Egypt
- Social media now and then
- Shakespeare’s hits and misses
- Debunking a conspiracy theory
- Unexpected traditions
- Who invented the SAT, and what is it?
- The most popular travel destinations for young adults in their 20s
- What is van life anyway?
- How is education different now than it was in the ‘70s
- How to live a more sustainable life
- The evolution of humans
- The history of the Internet
- Is organic really better?
- How to get the most out of an internship
- What employers are actually looking for on your resume, and how to write one
- Everything you need to know about global warming
- The top places with the most expensive cost of living in the United States
- The rise of TikTok
- What is influencer marketing and why is it so important?
- Classic movies that should be cancelled in 2021, and why
- Is eating vegan really better for your health?
- Are aliens real?
- Everything you need to know about the Big Bang Theory
- Why streaming services are the demise of classic cable
- Marijuana then and now: the process of getting it legalized
- 15 Memorable things about [blank]
- A comprehensive timeline of feminism
- Is print— newspapers, magazines, books— dead?
- The easiest foreign language to learn on your own
- The best life hacks I learned on TikTok
- What does white privilege mean to millennials and Generation Z?
- Understanding finance for young adults 101
- Everything you need to know about life after college
- The difference between electric cars and gas cars
- What is artificial intelligence anyway?
- How thrifting can help the environment
- The evolution of presentations: from caveman to TedTalks
- Applying your degree in real life
- The origins of your favorite music genre
- Everything you need to about becoming a surgeon
- The life cycle of [blank]
- Life without technology: where would we be without modern technology?
Make it beautiful
You have your topic, now what? Did you wait until the absolute last second to get started? Here’s the good news: no need for an all-nighter. Beautiful.ai can help you nail your college presentation in a pinch. The ease of use, and intuitive controls, help you create something brilliant in minutes, not hours. Start inspired with our inspiration gallery of pre-built templates and customize them to fit your content.
It’s important to connect with your audience on an emotional level, so make sure to pick trendy colors, modern fonts, and high-quality visual assets to compliment your presentation and evoke emotion. Engage your audience (especially your professor) with dynamic animations, or videos, to help control the narrative and direct their attention to the key takeaways.
Pro tip: use the shareable link to share your deck out with classmates, teachers, or social media friends after class.
Jordan Turner
Jordan is a Bay Area writer, social media manager, and content strategist.
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Free College And University Presentation Templates
Revitalize your presentations with our free college and university powerpoint templates and google slides themes create captivating visuals, introduce your esteemed institutions, share your academic achievements, present your portfolios, and make a lasting impact with our slides. download now to give an engaging educational experience to your audience.
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What are college and university powerpoint templates.
These templates are readymade slide decks with perfect visual themes and layouts suited for presentations coupled with higher education.
Where can we use these College and University Slides?
We can use these slides to promote educational institutes and to make professional presentations for seminars, lectures, student projects, research presentations, and more.
How can I make College and University PPT Slides in a presentation?
It's simple to make these slides in presentations by adding your institute's photographs, logos, and other design elements that align with your institution's branding. Pre-designed slides available online will also help you instantly make presentations with ease.
Who can use College and University PPT Templates?
Administrators, students, faculty members, and staff can use these templates to create higher education-related presentations.
Why do we need College and University PowerPoint Slides?
These templates can help us save time and effort. They ensure that your presentations have a professional and consistent look and feel.
Where can I find College and University PPT Templates for free?
One of the best platforms to find free templates is Slide Egg, where we can explore professional-looking slides.
Countway Practical Presentation Skills
Presentation Slides
Story Telling
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- Showtime! (Tips when "on stage")
- Upcoming Classes & Registration
On this page you will find many of the tips and common advice that we cover within our Practical Presentation Skills Workshop.
If you are hoping to attend a workshop in the future, please check the schedule of upcoming classes, and reserve your spot. Space does fill up each week, so please register early!
Creating slides to accompany your presentation can be a great way to provide complimentary visual representation of your topic. Slides are used to fill in the gaps while you tell the story.
Start your presentation with a brief introduction- who you are and what you are going to talk about.
Think about your presentation as a story with an organized beginning (why this topic), middle (how you did the research) and end (your summary findings and how it may be applicable or inform future research). You can provide a brief outline in the introduction so the audience may follow along.
Keep it simple with a few key concepts, examples and ideas.
Make sure your audience knows the key takeaway points you wish to get across.
A good way to practice this is to try and condense your presentation into an elevator pitch- what do you want the audience to walk away know?
Show your enthusiasm!
If you don’t think it is interesting- why should your audience?
Some Good Alternatives to PowerPoint:
- Google Slides
- Keynote (Mac)
- Prezi
- Zoho Show
- PowToon
- CustomShow
- Slidebean
- Haiku Deck
- Visme
- Emaze
- and more…
Your body language speaks volumes to how confident you are on the topic, how you are feeling up on stage and how receptive you are to your audience. Confident body language, such as smiling, maintaining eye contact, and persuasive gesturing all serve to engage your audience.
- Make eye contact with those in the audience that are paying attention and ignore the rest!
- Speak slower than what you would normally, take a moment to smile at your audience, and project your voice. Don’t rush, what you have to say is important!
- Don’t’ forget to breathe. Deep breaths and positive visualization can helps slow that pounding heart.
- Work on making pauses where you can catch your breath, take a sip of water, stand up straight, and continue at your practiced pace.
- Sweaty palms and pre-presentation jitters are no fun. Harness that nervous energy and turn it into enthusiasm! Exercising earlier in the day can help release endorphins and help relieve anxiety.
- Feeling shaky? Practicing confident body language is one way to boost your pre-presentation jitters. When your body is physically demonstrating confidence, your mind will follow suit. Standing or walking a bit will help you calm those butterflies before you go on stage.
- Don’t be afraid to move around and use the physical space you have available but keep your voice projected towards your audience.
- Practice, practice, practice! Get to the next Practical Presentation Skills workshop in Countway Library http://bit.ly/countwaypresent and practice your talk in front of a supportive and friendly group!
- Excessive bullet points
- Reading your slides instead of telling your story
- Avoid excessive transitions and gimmick
- Numerous charts (especially all on the same slide)
- Lack of enthusiasm and engagement from you
- Too much information and data dump
- Clutter and busy design
- Lack of design consistency
Now you are on stage!
When delivering the talk, watch out for these bad habits:
- Avoiding eye-contact
- Slouching or bad posture
- Crossed arms
- Non-purposeful movement
- Not projecting your voice
- Speaking away from the microphone
- Speaking with your back to the audience (often happens when reading slides)
- Next: Upcoming Classes & Registration >>
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University Project Proposal
University project proposal presentation, free google slides theme and powerpoint template.
This Project Proposal presentation is pretty cool. We have inserted a lot of doodles, so it is perfect for your university assignments. There are icons related to education, and the main color of the background is light blue. You’ll also find some yellow lines under the titles. The fonts that we have used for them are hand-drawn, that look like markers. For the body, we have employed readable rounded sans serif ones.
Features of this template
- A cool template with doodle design
- 100% editable and easy to modify
- 28 different slides to impress your audience
- Contains easy-to-edit graphics, maps and mockups
- Includes 500+ icons and Flaticon’s extension for customizing your slides
- Designed to be used in Google Slides and Microsoft PowerPoint
- 16:9 widescreen format suitable for all types of screens
- Includes information about fonts, colors, and credits of the free resources used
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Attribution required If you are a free user, you must attribute Slidesgo by keeping the slide where the credits appear. How to attribute?
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Presentations and posters
Guidance and tips for effective oral and visual presentations.
Academic presentations
Presenting your work allows you to demonstrate your knowledge and familiarity of your subject. Presentations can vary from being formal, like a mini lecture, to more informal, such as summarising a paper in a tutorial. You may have a specialist audience made up of your peers, lecturers or research practitioners or a wider audience at a conference or event. Sometimes you will be asked questions. Academic presentations maybe a talk with slides or a poster presentation, and they may be assessed. Presentations may be individual or collaborative group work.
A good presentation will communicate your main points to an audience clearly, concisely and logically. Your audience doesn’t know what it is you are trying to say, so you need to guide them through your argument.
There are a few key points that you should consider with any sort of presenting:
- What is the format? Is it a poster, a talk with visual material or a video?
- What is the purpose? Is it to summarise a topic; report the results of an experiment; justify your research approach?
- Who is your audience? Are they from your tutorial group, course or is it a wider audience?
- What content needs to be included? Do you need to cover everything, just one topic or a particular aspect? How much detail is expected?
- How should it be organised? This is often the trickiest part of designing a presentation and can take a few attempts.
Planning a presentation
Different people take different approaches to presentations. Some may start by doing some reading and research, others prefer to draft an outline structure first.
To make an effective start, check your course materials for the format you need to use (e.g. handbooks and Learn pages for style guidelines). If it is an oral presentation, how long do you have? If it will be assessed, have a look at the marking criteria so you know how you will be marked. (If you do not use the required formatting you may be penalised.) Do you need to allow time for questions?
One way to think about the content and draft a rough structure of your presentation is to divide it into a beginning, middle and end.
- The beginning: How are you going to set the scene for your audience and set out what they can expect to gain from your presentation? This section should highlight the key topic(s) and give any necessary background. How much background depends on your audience, for example your peers might need less of an introduction to a topic than other audiences. Is there a central question and is it clear? If using slides, can it be added as a header on subsequent slides so that it is always clear what you are discussing?
- The middle: How are you going tell the story of your work? This section should guide your audience through your argument, leading them to your key point(s). Remember to include any necessary evidence in support. You might also want to include or refer to relevant methods and materials.
- The end: What is your conclusion or summary? This section should briefly recap what has been covered in the presentation and give the audience the final take-home message(s). Think about the one thing you want someone to remember from your talk or poster. It is usually also good practice to include a reference or bibliography slide listing your sources.
Alternatively, you could start at the end and think about the one point you want your audience to take away from your presentation. Then you can work backwards to decide what needs to go in the other sections to build your argument.
Presentation planner worksheet (pdf)
Presentation planner worksheet (Word docx)
Presentation planner (Word rtf)
Using the right language can really help your audience follow your argument and also helps to manage their expectations.
Guiding your audience (pdf)
Guiding your audience (Word rtf)
Oral presentations – practise, practise, practise!
Giving a talk can be daunting. If you have a spoken presentation to give, with or without slides, make sure you have time to rehearse it several times.
Firstly, this is really good at helping you overcome any nerves as you’ll know exactly what you are going to say. It will build your confidence.
Secondly, saying something aloud is an effective way to check for sense, structure and flow. If it is difficult to say, or doesn’t sound right, then the audience may find it difficult to follow what you are trying to say.
Finally, practising helps you know how long your presentation will take. If your presentation is being assessed, you may be penalised for going over time as that would be unfair to other presenters (it is like going over your word count).
If you can, find out what resources and equipment you will have when you present. It is usually expected that presenters will wear or use a microphone so that everyone can hear. But you will still need to remember to project your voice and speak clearly. Also think about how you are going to use your visual material.
IS Creating accessible materials - PowerPoint presentations
IS LinkedIn Learning - online skills development
Making a video
There is no need to use expensive specialist equipment to make a recorded presentation. The Media Hopper Create platform allows film makers to create, store, share and publish their media content easily. You can create presentations using the Desktop Recorder on a PC or Mac.
All University of Edinburgh students are provided with an account on the Media Hopper service allowing you to record and upload media to your personal space and publish to channels.
You can also use your mobile phone or tablet to make a video presentation. The DIY Film School is an online course covering the basics of shooting video on a mobile device, filming outdoors and indoors and how to get the best audio. Some materials from LinkedIn Learning are relevant to the DIY Film School and include editing advice.
IS Media Hopper Create
IS DIY Film School online course
IS LinkedIn Learning and the DIY Film School
Poster presentations
A poster is a way of visually conveying information about your work. It is meant to be a taster or overview highlighting your key points or findings, not an in-depth explanation and discussion. Your poster should communicate your point(s) effectively without you being there to explain it.
The trickiest thing with poster presentations can be the limited space and words you have. You will need to think critically about what it is important to present.
If the poster is assessed, or is for an event such as a conference, there may be a size and format which you need to follow (e.g. A1 portrait or A0 landscape). Your title should be clear. Aim to make your poster as accessible as possible by considering the type size and font, colours and layout. It is usually good practice to include your name and email address so people know who you are and how to contact you.
Information Services (IS) have a range of resources including help on using software such as PowerPoint to make a poster and guides to printing one.
IS uCreate user guides and advice on poster printing
Standing up and talking can be intimidating; so can being filmed. Anxiety and stress can get in the way of performing effectively.
The Student Counselling Service offer advice and workshops on a variety of topics. They have produced a helpful e-booklet about stress, why we need it and how to manage our stress levels to strike the right balance.
Student Counselling service
Self-help online courses and workbooks on anxiety, stress and mental wellbeing
Stress: A short guide for students (pdf booklet)
Information Services (IS) provides access to a range of support and training for software provided by the University. This includes training and advice on LinkedIn Learning.
IS Digital skills and training
IS LinkedIn Learning
IS Microsoft Office 365 suite
Prezi is a popular alternative to PowerPoint but is often inaccessible to disabled people. Therefore, it is recommended that Prezi is not used for academic presentations. However, if you have to use Prezi, there are some steps you can take to improve your presentation.
IS PREZI and accessibility issues
If you are presenting at an external event, it may be appropriate to use University branding.
University brand guidelines and logos (Communications and Marketing)
This article was published on 2024-02-26
20 Great Examples of PowerPoint Presentation Design [+ Templates]
Published: January 17, 2024
When it comes to PowerPoint presentation design, there's no shortage of avenues you can take.
While all that choice — colors, formats, visuals, fonts — can feel liberating, it‘s important that you’re careful in your selection as not all design combinations add up to success.
In this blog post, I’m sharing some of my favorite PowerPoint tips and templates to help you nail your next presentation.
Table of Contents
What makes a good PowerPoint presentation?
Powerpoint design ideas, best powerpoint presentation slides, good examples of powerpoint presentation design.
In my opinion, a great PowerPoint presentation gets the point across succinctly while using a design that doesn't detract from it.
Here are some of the elements I like to keep in mind when I’m building my own.
1. Minimal Animations and Transitions
Believe it or not, animations and transitions can take away from your PowerPoint presentation. Why? Well, they distract from the content you worked so hard on.
A good PowerPoint presentation keeps the focus on your argument by keeping animations and transitions to a minimum. I suggest using them tastefully and sparingly to emphasize a point or bring attention to a certain part of an image.
2. Cohesive Color Palette
I like to refresh my memory on color theory when creating a new PowerPoint presentation.
A cohesive color palette uses complementary and analogous colors to draw the audience’s attention and help emphasize certain aspects at the right time.
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It‘s impossible for me to tell you the specific design ideas you should go after in your next PowerPoint, because, well, I don’t know what the goal of your presentation is.
Luckily, new versions of PowerPoint actually suggest ideas for you based on the content you're presenting. This can help you keep up with the latest trends in presentation design .
PowerPoint is filled with interesting boilerplate designs you can start with. To find these suggestions, open PowerPoint and click the “Design” tab in your top navigation bar. Then, on the far right side, you'll see the following choices:
This simplistic presentation example employs several different colors and font weights, but instead of coming off as disconnected, the varied colors work with one another to create contrast and call out specific concepts.
What I like: The big, bold numbers help set the reader's expectations, as they clearly signify how far along the viewer is in the list of tips.
10. “Pixar's 22 Rules to Phenomenal Storytelling,” Gavin McMahon
This presentation by Gavin McMahon features color in all the right places. While each of the background images boasts a bright, spotlight-like design, all the characters are intentionally blacked out.
What I like: This helps keep the focus on the tips, while still incorporating visuals. Not to mention, it's still easy for me to identify each character without the details. (I found you on slide eight, Nemo.)
11. “Facebook Engagement and Activity Report,” We Are Social
Here's another great example of data visualization in the wild.
What I like: Rather than displaying numbers and statistics straight up, this presentation calls upon interesting, colorful graphs, and charts to present the information in a way that just makes sense.
12. “The GaryVee Content Model,” Gary Vaynerchuk
This wouldn‘t be a true Gary Vaynerchuk presentation if it wasn’t a little loud, am I right?
What I like: Aside from the fact that I love the eye-catching, bright yellow background, Vaynerchuk does a great job of incorporating screenshots on each slide to create a visual tutorial that coincides with the tips. He also does a great job including a visual table of contents that shows your progress as you go .
13. “20 Tweetable Quotes to Inspire Marketing & Design Creative Genius,” IMPACT Branding & Design
We‘ve all seen our fair share of quote-chronicling presentations but that isn’t to say they were all done well. Often the background images are poor quality, the text is too small, or there isn't enough contrast.
Well, this professional presentation from IMPACT Branding & Design suffers from none of said challenges.
What I like: The colorful filters over each background image create just enough contrast for the quotes to stand out.
14. “The Great State of Design,” Stacy Kvernmo
This presentation offers up a lot of information in a way that doesn't feel overwhelming.
What I like: The contrasting colors create visual interest and “pop,” and the comic images (slides 6 through 12) are used to make the information seem less buttoned-up and overwhelming.
15. “Clickbait: A Guide To Writing Un-Ignorable Headlines,” Ethos3
Not going to lie, it was the title that convinced me to click through to this presentation but the awesome design kept me there once I arrived.
What I like: This simple design adheres to a consistent color pattern and leverages bullet points and varied fonts to break up the text nicely.
16. “Digital Transformation in 50 Soundbites,” Julie Dodd
This design highlights a great alternative to the “text-over-image” display we've grown used to seeing.
What I like: By leveraging a split-screen approach to each presentation slide, Julie Dodd was able to serve up a clean, legible quote without sacrificing the power of a strong visual.
17. “Fix Your Really Bad PowerPoint,” Slide Comet
When you‘re creating a PowerPoint about how everyone’s PowerPoints stink, yours had better be terrific. The one above, based on the ebook by Seth Godin, keeps it simple without boring its audience.
What I like: Its clever combinations of fonts, together with consistent color across each slide, ensure you're neither overwhelmed nor unengaged.
18. “How Google Works,” Eric Schmidt
Simple, clever doodles tell the story of Google in a fun and creative way. This presentation reads almost like a storybook, making it easy to move from one slide to the next.
What I like: This uncluttered approach provides viewers with an easy-to-understand explanation of a complicated topic.
19. “What Really Differentiates the Best Content Marketers From The Rest,” Ross Simmonds
Let‘s be honest: These graphics are hard not to love. I especially appreciate the author’s cartoonified self-portrait that closes out the presentation. Well played, Ross Simmonds.
What I like: Rather than employing the same old stock photos, this unique design serves as a refreshing way to present information that's both valuable and fun.
20. “Be A Great Product Leader,” Adam Nash
This presentation by Adam Nash immediately draws attention by putting the company's logo first — a great move if your company is well known.
What I like: He uses popular images, such as ones of Megatron and Pinocchio, to drive his points home. In the same way, you can take advantage of popular images and media to keep your audience engaged.
PowerPoint Presentation Examples for the Best Slide Presentation
Mastering a PowerPoint presentation begins with the design itself.
Get inspired by my ideas above to create a presentation that engages your audience, builds upon your point, and helps you generate leads for your brand.
Editor's note: This post was originally published in March 2013 and has been updated for comprehensiveness. This article was written by a human, but our team uses AI in our editorial process. Check out our full disclosure to learn more about how we use AI.
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Home » Campus Life » Career Education » Get Experience » Undergraduate Research » Undergraduate Scholarly Showcase » 2024 Presentations
2024 Showcase Presentations
At the 2024 Showcase, more than 350 students from more than 25 disciplines will present nearly 275 research projects, including more than 200 posters, 28 live podium presentations and 44 video presentations.
Students who choose this format present their research project in an original five-minute video. Links to 2024 video presentations will be posted in the next few days.
- Chemical and Cellular Frontiers (#A-01 to #A-03)
- Experiential Learning (#B-01 to #B-04)
- Green Cincinnati (#C-01 to #C-18)
- Music and Culture (#D-01 to #D-04)
- Substance Use, Mental and Behavioral Heath, and Sociology (#E-01 to #E-10)
- The Social Safety Net (#F-01 to #F-05)
As individuals or small teams, students create posters that convey the purpose, process, and outcome of their project with aesthetic appeal. Each student delivers a five-minute overview of their project to reviewers in person on Tuesday, April 16, 2024.
- View or download the Morning Poster Guide
- View or download the Afternoon Poster Guide
Podium Presentations
Students individually develop and deliver an eight-minute presentation live in person on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. View podium presentation details
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
Tip 4: Make use of charts and graphs. We all love a good stat. Charts and graphs are a great way to present quantitative evidence and confirm the legitimacy of your claims. They make your presentation more visually appealing and make your data more memorable too. But don't delve too deep into the details.
Download and customize our University Google Slides themes and PowerPoint templates and get ready for some research! Free Easy to edit Professional. ... Organize your subjects, lessons and activities with this University Agenda presentation. Many slides look like different types of notebooks and diaries, and we include isometric illustrations. ...
Impress Your University Peers and Create Your Presentation with Template.net's Free University Presentation Templates. Browse Through Our Website for a Ready-Made Powerpoint Presentation for Student Group Reports, Classroom Introductions, Rubric Presentations, and More. Each Template Comes with Preformatted Layouts from the Front Page to the Last Page of the Slide. Check Out Our Samples and ...
Color. Skip to start of list. 329 templates. Create a blank University Presentation. Cream Purple Abstract Thesis Defense Presentation. Presentation by Colllab Supply. Blue White Aesthetic Minimalist Thesis Defense Presentation. Presentation by Kuning Jeruk Studio. Dark Green and White Modern Minimalist Thesis Defense Presentation.
Free Google Slides theme and PowerPoint template. Going from high school to college is a big step in the academic life of any person. Make these new students feel at home studying in your college by using our new free template, whose friendly design can turn your presentation into the best introduction for them. Making a good impression is ...
In the student sample, though the presentation is simple, the images add to the overall purpose of the presentation, and the student has listed references at the end of the presentation. This is a common requirement for college assignment presentation. Click on the image below to view a PDF of the sample student presentation.
How to improve your PPT slides for an academic presentation at university. It discusses design, fonts, structure, animation, pictures, graphs, and referencin...
Published on October 8, 2021 by Tegan George and Julia Merkus. Revised on July 23, 2023. We have adapted several of our most popular articles into lecture slides that you can use to teach your students about a variety of academic topics. Scribbr slides are free to use, customize, and distribute for educational purposes.
Here are 10 tips to keep in mind to ensure your presentation hits the mark. 1. Any time you put something on your slides, its primary purpose is to help the audience, not you. Many presenters will add copious text or other elements to help themselves remember points they want to make. However, this is usually less helpful for the audience (most ...
4,844 templates. Create a blank Education Presentation. Organizational Patterns in Informational Text Education Presentation in Blue Green Friendly Hand Drawn Style. Presentation by Canva Creative Studio. Conjunctions, Prepositions, and Interjections Language Review Game Presentation in Pastel Simple Style.
Turning a research paper into a visual presentation is difficult; there are pitfalls, and navigating the path to a brief, informative presentation takes time and practice. As a TA for GEO/WRI 201: Methods in Data Analysis & Scientific Writing this past fall, I saw how this process works from an instructor's standpoint. I've presented my own ...
Tip #4: Practice. Practice. Practice. You should always practice your presentation in full before you deliver it. You might feel silly delivering your presentation to your cat or your toddler, but you need to do it and do it again. You need to practice to ensure that your presentation fits within the time parameters.
Here's the good news: no need for an all-nighter. Beautiful.ai can help you nail your college presentation in a pinch. The ease of use, and intuitive controls, help you create something brilliant in minutes, not hours. Start inspired with our inspiration gallery of pre-built templates and customize them to fit your content.
Revitalize your presentations with our free College and University PowerPoint templates and Google Slides Themes! Create captivating visuals, introduce your esteemed institutions, share your academic achievements, present your portfolios, and make a lasting impact with our slides. Download now to give an engaging educational experience to your ...
Presentation Slides. Creating slides to accompany your presentation can be a great way to provide complimentary visual representation of your topic. Slides are used to fill in the gaps while you tell the story. Start your presentation with a brief introduction- who you are and what you are going to talk about.
Free Google Slides theme and PowerPoint template. This Project Proposal presentation is pretty cool. We have inserted a lot of doodles, so it is perfect for your university assignments. There are icons related to education, and the main color of the background is light blue. You'll also find some yellow lines under the titles. The fonts that ...
Making a PowerPoint. Follow these step-by-step guides on how to add certain elements to your PowerPoint presentation: Select a Design Theme. Add or Delete a Slide. Add an Image to a Slide. Add Notes to Your Slides. Add Animations.
Poster presentations. A poster is a way of visually conveying information about your work. It is meant to be a taster or overview highlighting your key points or findings, not an in-depth explanation and discussion. Your poster should communicate your point (s) effectively without you being there to explain it.
Following are the 10 Best Student PowerPoint Presentation Sample Templates. 1.College Students Career Plan. The College Students Career Plan template is perfect for any student who is looking to present their career goals and plans. With its clean and professional design, this template is sure to make a great impression on your audience!
Some of the best presentation topic ideas for students center around topics such as current events, education, general culture, health, life skills, literature, media and science. When picking presentation topics, consider these things: your hobbies, the books you read, the kind of TV shows you watch, what topics you're good at and what you ...
Find Free Slide Show Templates that Suit your Needs. Minimalist. Fun. Simple. Abstract. Corporate. Pretty. Captivate your audience with our collection of professionally-designed PowerPoint and Google Slides templates. Boost your presentations and make a lasting impression!
6. "Blitzscaling: Book Trailer," Reid Hoffman. If you're going to go the minimalistic route, I'd take note of this PowerPoint presentation example from Reid Hoffman. This clean design adheres to a simple, consistent color scheme with clean graphics peppered throughout to make the slides more visually interesting.
Podium Presentations. Students individually develop and deliver an eight-minute presentation live in person on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. View podium presentation details. Guide to all presentations for the 2024 Undergraduate Scholarly Showcase at the University of Cincinnati.