In this issue:
LEADERSHIP UPDATES
LETTER FROM THE CHAIR
LETTER FROM THE CHAIR-ELECT
LETTER FROM THE EDITORS
ARTICLES
EVIDENCE FROM AUTHENTIC ITA DISCOURSE AND TOEFL IBT SPEAKING RESPONSES IN SUPPORT OF ITA ASSESSMENT
TV CLIPS TO RAISE ITAS' AWARENESS OF BIDIALECTALISM AND THE RHOTIC /R/
ITA COURSES DURING COVID-19: A SURVEY ABOUT REMOTE LEARNING (BEFORE, DURING, AND FUTURE)
PRESENTING A POSTER SESSION
ABOUT THIS COMMUNITY
HISTORY OF ITA INTEREST SECTION
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS FOR ITA-IS NEWSLETTER
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PRESENTING A POSTER SESSION
Maria B. Mendoza and Jennifer C. Grill, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, USA
Maria Mendoza
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Jennifer Grill
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At TESOL 2019, we presented two posters and received many
compliments. Following our presentations, people asked about our reasons
for presenting a poster. We want to share our perspectives on the
benefits of poster sessions as well as some strategies to prepare for a
successful poster presentation.
Benefits
- Posters work very well to share a single activity or a small
set of related activities. The conference app allows you to upload any
related materials, so attendees can easily access them.
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You get to interact with attendees in a more personal way
(one-on-one) than with a traditional session format. You can have
meaningful conversations with attendees, learn about their context, and
even share ideas on how they could adapt or extend your
activities.
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You prepare your work in advance, so there is no last-minute
stress. In a normal presentation, we usually keep editing slides,
sometimes until right before the presentation. Because your poster is
already printed before the conference, you cannot make any changes,
which alleviates stress.
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You know in advance the time that your session will be
scheduled (usually around lunchtime on Wednesday, Thursday, or
Friday).
Strategies
- Narrow your topic. We have found that a specific activity or a
small set of activities works best. Include the goal of the activity,
the materials needed, and how to implement it.
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To avoid copyright issues, we have started using our
smartphones to take our own pictures to include in the posters.
Additionally, we ask for our students’ permission to use them in a
poster. Most of our students do not have any problem with this.
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Check out TESOL’s Poster
Session Guidelines.
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Start early. Give yourself enough time to edit and print your
poster. Find out where you can print your poster and how long it will
take so you can plan accordingly.
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Remember that posters are visual documents; the challenge is
to be concise but complete. You can provide extra details verbally and
through handouts.
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Using poster templates:
- Poster templates can be found online. One good source is the
template page on PhDPosters.com.
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Templates are typically PowerPoint documents, but Illustrator
can be used, too, if you’ve got the technology skills.
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For our posters, we use a 72” x 42” template. Once we have
the content and formatting to our satisfaction, we save the PowerPoint
file as a PDF
- Printing your poster:
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Send your PDF to the print shop (we use the UPS on campus). We typically use heavyweight matte paper.
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When you send the PDF to the printer, ask that the printed
poster be 72” x 42” in accordance with the size guidelines of TESOL,
though every conference has its own size restrictions. We’ve also had
posters that were slightly smaller, and these were fine, too.
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The cost for printing in our area is currently around US$85 for this size and type of paper.
- Make sure that you purchase a poster tube to transport your
poster to and from the conference. When you arrive at the conference,
all you have to do is use pushpins (provided by TESOL) to hang up your
poster.
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Work with a copresenter. It is great to have another person
put the poster together and help edit. In addition, the two of you can
interact with more attendees at once. If you are presenting alone, some
people may leave because they do not have a chance to talk with you
immediately. Finally, if you cannot make it to your session for some
reason, your copresenter can be there.
We hope to have inspired you to submit a poster presentation
for TESOL 2021. We have presented several posters over the past 5 years
and have different templates that we are willing to share. If you are
interested in viewing them, please contact us. We will be happy to hear
from you! If the International Teaching Assistants Interest Section has
several posters each day for TESOL 2021, we can locate ourselves in the
same area and meet with other international teaching assistant
professionals to learn from each other.
Maria Mendoza is the chair for the International
Teaching Assistants Interest Section. She completed her doctorate in
multicultural/multilingual education at Florida State University in 2004
and has been the international teaching assistant coordinator for
Florida State University and Center for Intensive English Studies since
2005.
Jennifer Grill has a doctorate in adult education
from Florida State University as well as master’s degrees in adult
education and multilingual/multicultural education. She has been able to
combine her interests in adult education and language learning through
teaching university courses on adult learning, teacher education in
English language learning, applied linguistics, and
writing.
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