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Presentation Handouts copyright © 2004-2007 by Mary Bucholtz, University of California, Santa Barbara Handouts are crucial in linguistic research, so it's important that you master this discourse genre. Here are some basic guidelines for creating an effective handout for sociocultural linguistics. Make people pay attention to the content of the handout, not its appearance
Make the handout easy to navigate.
Elements of the handoutTitle sectionThis occurs at the top of page 1 (and nowhere else; don't have a header with the title on every page). This section includes more than the title. You should have the following information, typically in this order, typically centered (i.e., model it on the manuscript of the article that this presentation will eventually become): title of paper, your name, (your university affiliation and perhaps department: for conferences, job talks, etc.), your email address. It's a marker of a newbie to put too much information in the title section; if you want to include the presentation location (e.g., the conference acronym, such as AAA or LSA) and date, you can add it in the first page header or below your email address, but don't list the session title, organizer, etc. BodyThis can vary quite a bit, depending on the nature of your presentation. You can structure the body using headings and/or an outline format, or if your presentation is primarily data-driven, you can simply allow readers to follow along using the example numbers. Don't overstructure your handout; one or two heading levels is the most you should use. QuotesYou can include quotes from other researchers if relevant, but you should not number them. Cite the author, date, and page number parenthetically, and then add the full reference in your reference section at the end of the handout. ExamplesAll data examples should be numbered. Tables and figures should be numbered separately from data examples. That is, if you have a table that occurs after data example (4), call it Table 1 and follow it with data example (5). Number all examples, tables, and figures using Arabic numbers only. By convention, data examples are usually numbered in parentheses above the data: (1), (2). Don't write "example" before the example number. TablesKeep their design simple, and use them only for the presentation of material that won't work better in a data example or a graphic of some kind (e.g., lists of discourse markers and their function in the discourse work well in a table; simple statistics may be best presented in a table, but often a graphic is better for this purpose). Transcripts should almost never be in tables. All tables should have clear and informative captions: not "Table 1: Codeswitching" but "Table 1: Percentage of codeswitching in narrative, by gender." Look at examples of published tables to find an effective format. Tables are harder to design than you might think. FiguresFigures include charts and graphics. If you have graphics, make sure they're clearly visible on the handout. Color graphics are pretty but expensive; a clear black and white photocopy is usually fine. Like tables, figures should also have informative captions. TranscriptsProvide line numbers for transcripts of more than a few lines (typically 5 or so). Line numbers should be Arabic numbers with no parentheses or periods. Try to format your numbering so that long lines don't run into the numbering column or the speaker name column. Don't: 1 A: blahblahblahblah blahblahblahblah blahblahblahblah Do: 1 A: blahblahblahblah blahblahblahblah blahblahblahblah Include only the text that you absolutely need to make your argument and use ellipses to mark omitted text; if you need to use a long transcript, highlight the material under discussion (e.g., underline or boldface, arrow in the margin). Transcription conventionsYou should list all the transcription conventions you use in the handout, and only those. To save space, you can simply cite your source for transcription conventions, if you're using a widely known system like Jefferson's or Du Bois's. ReferencesList only the references mentioned in the presentation (orally or on the handout). These are usually no more than five or ten for a short talk, or a page for a longer talk. |
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University of California, Santa Barbara | College of Letters and Science | Department of Linguistics Last modified on: November 27, 2006. |