IBAC Seminar Schedule
    1:00-2:00 p.m.
    HEB 2429

 

We’ve got a couple of open presentation slots on January 23rd and Februrary 6th; email Julie (rollins at chem.utah.edu) if you are interested in presenting your latest research (6-8 slides, ~20 minutes). 

October 24, 2008

    Trang Nguyen (Conboy Group)
    Jennifer Williams (Porter Group)
    (Refreshments: Conboy Group)

November 7, 2008

    Chris Cauley (White Group)
    Jon Schaefer (Harris Group)
    (Refreshments: White Group)

November 21, 2008

    Krystal Brown (Conboy Group)
    Emily Heider (Harris Group)
   
(Refreshments: Zharov Group)

December 12, 2008

   Jennifer Gasser (Harris Group)
   Jong Won Park (Shumaker-Parry Group)
    (Refreshments: Shumaker-Parry Group)

December 19, 2008

   Holiday Social -- TBA

January 9, 2008

   Nikka Bradley (Porter Group)
   Alexis Crawford (Porter Group)
   (Refreshments: Porter Group)

January 23, 2008

   Alexis Abelow (Zharov Group)
   (Refreshments: Harris Group)

February 6, 2008

   Patrick Shem (Shumaker-Parry Group)
    (Refreshments: Conboy Group)

February 20, 2008

   Patricia deLeon (Zharov Group)
   Zhe Gao (Zharov Group)
   (Refreshments: White Group)

March 6, 2008

   Doug Krieg (Harris Group)
    Deric Holden (White Group)
    (Refreshments: Zharov Group)



Research Presentation Guidelines

  • As per suggestions from the professors and group as a whole, please keep in mind the following when preparing / giving your IBAC research presentation:
  • Adhere to a strict time limit of 20 minutes presentation and 10 minutes question/answer.
  • If you have completed your pre-oral, limit your presentation to a few slides on your most recent work. Alternatively, present your work in a “chalk-talk” format.
  • If you have not yet completed the pre-oral, feel free to present a full powerpoint, though consider focusing the majority of your effort and time on your most recent findings.
  • Well polished presentations detract from the goal of these presentations: to gain experience communicating your findings to the scientific community. Therefore presenting the same talk as your seminar, pre-oral, group meeting, thesis defense, etc. is counter-productive.