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When you present at an academic conference, scope out your room before your session starts. |
Many of you have likely attended an academic conference during your graduate program, and several of you are probably planning on presenting at one in the near future. Conferences are of course major components of academic life but also common in research and/or knowledge-based fields. The unstoppable conference phenomenon naturally gives rise to plenty of guidelines for presenters and speculations on past, present, and future uses for conferences. For a recent overview of such concerns, see this short but informative
2013 article that ran in
The Guardian. Conference etiquette, or seeming lack of it, is another topic of interest to conference goers, as noted in this
2015 piece that appeared in
Chronicle Vitae featuring an interview with Anna Post, the great-great-granddaughter of famed etiquette guru Emily Post.
In contrast to such general-interest articles, this post offers some conferencing food for thought specifically targeted to you, the NIU thesis or dissertation writer. Photos and most anecdotes come from my experiences this past week presenting and attending the 54th
Allerton English Articulation Conference in Monticello, Illinois.
Traveling
In addition to obvious preparation musts such as practicing your planned speech (
at least three times) and identifying sessions to attend before and after you present, double-check your travel arrangements with the goal of arriving at the venue at least an hour earlier than registration time.
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Ordered rows in the gardens at Allerton.
Beware: routes to conference sites may not be so orderly. |
Commonsense advice, yes, but nevertheless worth repeating. You may have fairly clear directions, but expect to run into complications during the actual journey and plan accordingly. Case in point: the drive down to the venue in Monticello (not my first trip there—I also presented at Allerton four years ago) took longer than planned because I got lost. My memories of the route off the interstate were fuzzy, my printed directions turned out to be slightly out of date, and access to directions via phone or GPS device is wonky in this rural area. A related anecdote: last April I presented at a conference in San Diego. Accomplishing the first trolley ride from hotel to venue there also took a bit longer than expected. Once on the scene I found myself relearning how waiting to cross busy streets can add minutes to your walking time and that trolleys don’t always arrive or depart exactly when scheduled.
Surveying
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The small but adequate Butternut Room at Allerton.
Room size naturally affects your speaking approach. |
After registering and donning your name tag, wander and mingle but also check out the room you’ll be presenting in. A common bit of advice is to test equipment you may need such as computer, OHP, screen, or microphone. The earlier you can do this, the better. Ideally, you should visit your room well in advance of your session so that you can also get a feel for its size and layout in relation to your talk. A large space naturally requires a different speaking approach than a small one does. If you can scope out the room while it’s empty, stand at the front or at the lectern. Practice parts of your presentation. If chairs or tables are movable (and if your session is the next one), consider ways you can rearrange the speaking and/or audience areas to suit your needs but especially those of your expected attendees. Also consider lighting. Depending on the sun’s position during the time of your session, window shades might need to be adjusted. Before the presentation at Allerton this past week, my speaking partner and I went through all these steps. As a result, our presentation ran smoothly and featured engaged participation from attendees.
Presenting
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Food line at Allerton. |
Surely you’ve heard plenty about practical approaches to delivering a presentation. Let me add a reminder that your planned speech, though very important, is still a minuscule moment within the overall time you’ll spend sharing your ideas at a conference. Before and after your session and during other sessions, you’ll have numerous chances to speak with others about your work. At Allerton, I met and chatted with several attendees during lunch; I met and conversed with several others between various sessions, during walks in the gardens, and over dinner. In so doing, I naturally discussed aspects of my joint presentation but also my dissertation, teaching, and career plans. Remembering that presenting at a conference means more than just speaking formally for a short time can actually help you when it’s your time to stand and deliver. Share main ideas in your planned speech. Expect to elaborate on these and other ideas during Q & A and during other interactions throughout the event.
Reflecting
How did the presentation go? Were the follow-up discussions and later sessions constructive and helpful? Was it all worth it? You’ll have various answers to these questions immediately after your session and as the conference moves to a close. But you can expect a different set of answers in the days and months that follow. These later reflections will be most useful to you in the long run. Expect to reevaluate your studies, your stance on issues important in your field, and your ongoing thesis or dissertation project during and after your next academic conference. If you can, spend some time outside the venue during and after the event to foster these healthy reflections and to add to the overall experience. Allerton is especially rewarding in this regard. But no matter where your conference is held, there is always much to explore within but also beyond the center.
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Path to the Walled Garden at Allerton.
Heed your long-view reflections after an academic conference. |