Project Overview

During the 3 classes from Friday Dec. 1 to Weds Dec. 6 of this term we will have a poster session in the ESB Gallery. During this mini-conference, on each day, a specified number of groups will be "on deck": You will work with a partner to deliver and discuss some science in an informal way. Please view this exercise as guiding a short discussion and NOT a formal lecture. In detail, this is not so different as guiding your colleagues through your mind maps in class.

Presentations will be concurrent. On each day, there will be 3 and sometimes 4 presentations.

What’s in your poster and what is the format?
This project is an opportunity to be creative in both content and in the style of delivery. Posters can be like standard posters you see on walls (examples are below via a link to some from 2018). However, they can also be interactive. Your mission is to be effective: The examples from 2018 are just examples of what was standard before the pandemic. We are in a new world with new capabilities. Be creative: There are many ways to do this. From a skeleton of information on an otherwise blank poster, you can, for example, build a mind map in real time of the key points and how they are related to the figures that drive your question. You can use video, interpretive dance, whatever: As long as you are effective. As I indicate below, your audience will have read your poster before your presentation so you can feel free to be socratic to engage in discussion. Use your audience to help work through your project if you wish-- do not feel compelled to simply deliver information as a form of lecture. This format is both more time-consuming to prepare and less interesting to your audience.

Requirements of Presenters
The subject of your poster can be drawn from any area of Earth and planetary science. The structure of your project must have these elements:



Examples of posters from 2018

Examplesposters from 2021




Requirements of Audience
Presenters on any given day have a lot of work to do. If you are not presenting, however, you still have some work to do. Each audience member must prepare a mind map or concept map for any TWO of the posters being presented on a given day. The mind or concept map can vary in focus. It could be aimed at establishing the links between the question asked, the data analyzed and the model used to explain or understand the data. Does the story hang together? Are there logical holes or other issues with the poster? Alternatively, build a mind map that drills into one feature of a poster. You choose.






Poster Deliverables

Deliverable A: 1 Page proposal. Be sure to


Deliverable B: A ONE PAGE PDF poster that is less than 5 MB in size. The poster must fit within a 36" x 48" space. See examples made available below.

Deliverable C: On days 1-3, audience members (NOT PRESENTERS) must upload mind maps for any 2 posters they choose (see above)AND ASSESS the presentations of 3 groups for effectiveness using a form that will be available through CANVAS. To receive full marks on this project, you must carry out this work in full: It will provide useful feedback for the presenters who have worked hard to convey a story. Your assessment, mind map (what you leanred) and feedback will be made available to the Presenting groups. More on that closer to the start of the poster session.



Some other information:

A Rubric

What is an excellent project-- Some ingredients?


Some Practical Guidelines
Success through simplicity or “keep it simple and stupid”: Mostly aimed at old-school posters but the ideas carry forward here even if your whole poster is a mind map

Content


Prose vs. Bullets: Use bullets! Imagine you have 30s to draw someone in to your work-- during a poster session you probably have less time to do this in reality!
Example of Prose
Most of the information about Europa was gathered through the Galileo mission. During the flyby Galileo flew about 351 km above the icy moon and it detected directional changes in Europa's magetic field. In combination with other fluctuations in magnetic field, these changes suggested that Europa has a layer of electrically conducting material, such as salty, liquid ocean. The measurements made during the Callisto flyby also revealed a similar result in magnetic field suggesting a presence of a liquid layer. It is commonly agreed among scientists that a solid body of ice is a very poor electrical conductor, whereas melted ice containing salt, like the sea water found on Earth, is a fairly good conductor. As a result it was proposed that the liquid could be salt water melted from the solid ice shell which allows it to easily carry electrical currents and produce the observed changing magnetic field. Such finding supports the prediction of the existence of the interior subsurface liquid.”

An Example of Saying the Same thing with Bullets:
observation:
Magnetic, imaging, and spectroscopic measurements were made by the Galileo as it flew by Europa and Callisto.

inferences: Fluctuations and changes in direction of magnetic fields were interpreted as evidence for an interior electrically conducting layer, possibly a salty liquid ocean.