Hey!
I was in 6th grade last year, and I know how you feel. So, here's what I do to keep the presentation good:
-Make sure you know all your facts. If it's a subject you know well, you can improvise a bit while you're doing the presentation.
-Practice using notecards. Put pointers on them to help you remember what you're supposed to say, but not all the information. These will help you form the oral presentation.
-Form an order that you want to present the information in. Memorize that first. It will help you if you forget what you're supposed to say.
-Be yourself! It's easier to make the presentation flow nicely!
HAVE FUN!
Other than those, I would reccomend practicing a lot! As they say, practice makes perfect!
Hope this helps,
muffinlover515
2007-02-26 10:52:05
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answer #1
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answered by muffinlover515 2
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OK, Max! Here is a technique used by the ancient orators, but modernized for you.
First break down your presentation into 6-9 key points you want to make. Index cards usually help. DON'T READ your presentation, but use the reminders to help you put it into your own words, once you know everything there is to know about the subject. :-)
Then imagine walking into your house or apartment through the front door. Turn into the first room. In that room, say it is the dining room, imagine a GIANT platter of whatever is connected to the first point in your presentation. The key is to imagine something HUGE, UNUSUAL (an elephant, bees, cactus, a huge tree, a waterfall, etc- something not usually IN your dining room!) not just the dining room chair, though that can work if you can connect it in your head to the first point.
Then walk in a regular path through all the rooms of your house. Associate each point of your presentation with something sitting in that room that makes an amazingly hard-to-forget link. (Spiders attack you from all directions (each with 8 legs) to remember that there are 8 basic types of what-ya-call-its. :-) )
Practice, Practice, Practice! sometimes in front of a mirror helps!
:-)
Hope that helps... it is a good way to remember a sequence of points for a presentation!
Other good memory techniques abound.... several great classic books on memory are by Lucas and Lorayne. They describe ways to remember numbers and associate a list of things with objects or words. Really good. The Memory Book is one of theirs.
Hope that helps! :-)
2007-02-26 11:01:35
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answer #2
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answered by hp-answers.yahoo 3
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think you need to think about it then write it down then design it and then you need to edit it
2007-02-26 10:48:12
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answer #3
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answered by Alice 3
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