Privacy Seminar: Student Lecture
Requirements
In a seminar, students prepare lectures for other students. This means that you have to prepare and present a 2 hour lecture on a topic of your choice. You can either choose one of the predefined topics, or propose your own (but the choice has to be approved by the teachers). The lecture has to be based on several scientific papers. For each of the predefined topics an initial list of papers is provided, but you are expected to find more relevant literature yourself!
You give the lecture with the same of students you will write the student paper with.
You are free to choose the format of your lecture. You can use overhead, blackboard or beamer. When using sheets or slides, make sure that you do not fit too much information on one slide, and that you use no more than 50 slides in total. Make sure there is room for discussion, and questions.
The goal of the lecture is to inform the other students on the topic you choose, to let them understand the main ideas as well as the technical details of that topic, and to provide a broader context in which these ideas developed.
Prepare your lecture well in advance. Search for some additional material relevant to the topic (i.e. don't base it on a single paper). Try to make your lecture interactive. Prepare questions and/or discussion topics for class. Use these throughout the lecture, don't save them all until the end.
Pay equal attention to present the problem, putting it into a societal and legal context, and presenting the (technical) solution. Divide the presentation equally over all group members so that each of you present for roughly the same amount of time and with comparable complexity of content presented.
You must discuss lectures with the teachers at least one week before you are scheduled to give them to class. We have a fixed time slot for that: from 13:00 to 13:30 each Thursday in the Erasmus building, room 19.29 (at the 19 floor). Send an email, containing a draft of the lecture in pdf at least one day before (i.e. Wednesday 12 at noon at the latest). These are mandatory requirements.
Unless all students participating in the seminar are Dutch, prepare your lectures in English. Otherwise, you can choose between Dutch and English.
Grading
Scoring is somewhat similar to the method used for scoring Bachelor and Master presentations.
The content of the lecture is scored according to the following criteria:
- Argumentation and Depth
- Whether your lecture provides a solid basis and backing of all statements and claims made, and whether it covers all important topics in sufficient detail.
- Intelligibility
- Whether the message comes across, whether your lecture connects to what your audience expects and understands, how well you explain certain topics.
- Comprehensiveness
- Whether your lecture covers all important aspects, and clearly separates important issues from secondary details. Equal attention should be paid to technical and legal/societal issues.
The form of the lecture is scored according to the following criteria:
- Structure
- Logical ordering of your lecture, the relationship between the topics.
- Attractiveness
- Whether your lecture captivates the audience, your use of supporting materials (e.g. powerpoint).
The performance of the lecture is scored according to the following criteria:
- Delivery
- Level of engagement and contact with the audience, your presence in front of the class, the liveliness and tone of your lecture. Language proficiency.
- Interaction
- Level of interactivity, the way you respond to questions.
On each of the criteria you can score -
, 0
,
or +
. If you score 0
(satisfactory) on all
criteria, this corresponds to a 7 as the final grade.
You will be graded right after the presentation. We will discuss the scores with you right after the presentation (i.e. from 12:15-12:30).
Last Version - e1e3326.
(Note: changeover from CVS to dotless svn version numbers on Jan 19, 2008, and changeover to GIT versioning on May 30, 2013.)
Maintained by Jaap-Henk Hoepman
Email: jhh@cs.ru.nl