Final Poster/Presentation Clarifications
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Each group will either (1) present a poster at the poster session on Thursday, 12/5, or (2) give a presentation in class on Friday, 12/6. An individual in a group may request to do a presentation even if the group is planning on presenting a poster. Depending on which you are doing, follow the relevant gouidelines below:
You will submit, and present slides in-class. Presentation time will be decided based on group formation and number of projects and discussed in class. Please ensure that your submitted slides are accessible and that you are present accessibly and stay on-time. Your slides should include the following. Note that *update* are slides you have presented before and **new** are new content.
Please be aware that posters have a *hard* submission deadline because we need to print them on a shared poster printer. Refer to [Ed]({{site.discussion}}) for details. Here is a [UW page with poster templates](https://www.washington.edu/brand/templates/research-posters/). Please follow DO-IT's [guide to creating an accessible poster](https://www.washington.edu/doit/how-can-i-create-conference-poster-accessible-people-disabilities) when you do this. You should also provide a QR code next to each image that provides ALT text for that image. You can use a site such as [qr.io](https://qr.io/) to generate these QR codes.
Create a poster and present it on Thursday, 12/5 during section (2:30pm-4:30pm, location TBD). You will be graded only on the first two competencies (Accessible Document Creation, Image Description). Course staff will print your posters for you, and will also provide easels and posterboards. Please be aware that posters have a *hard* submission deadline because we need to print them on a shared poster printer.
We’d like for you to stay the entire two hours so that you can both present your posters and also walk around to see your peers’ posters, but if you can only attend the section you’re registered for, that’s okay. The poster session will be open to the rest of the Allen School / CREATE. Be prepared to talk about your poster to your peers and other members of the Allen School community. Additionally, your group will sign up for a timeslot to present your poster to course staff.
Presenting a poster accessibly is similar to giving an accessible talk -- you need to describe images visuals you are talking about on the poster. In addition, keep in mind the following points (quoted from Rua Williams' [Guide to Making Accessible Research Posters](http://www.ruamae.com/disability-advocacy/guide-to-making-accessible-research-posters/)
Presenting a poster accessibly is similar to giving an accessible talk -- you need to describe images visuals you are talking about on the poster. In addition, keep in mind the following points (quoted from Rua Williams' [Guide to Making Accessible Research Posters](http://www.ruamae.com/disability-advocacy/guide-to-making-accessible-research-posters/))
"While your poster should be informational enough to be of interest even when you aren’t present, don’t expect people to read the poster while you are standing there. Present it! When you are not there, consider leaving a way for people to ask questions, such as post-it notes, a Sli.do event, or even a twitter tag."
Rua also recommends: "While your poster should be informational enough to be of interest even when you aren’t present, don’t expect people to read the poster while you are standing there. Present it! When you are not there, consider leaving a way for people to ask questions, such as post-it notes, a Sli.do event, or even a twitter tag."
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