I had a 10-minute paper to deliver first up in the morning, along with 4 other first year PhD students, which was interesting. I've spoken at conferences before for work-related stuff, but this was my first academic style conference. The audience was small and consisted of everyone's supervisors, family and friends but at least that meant it was a supportive group. Pretty much everyone used bigger words than me, though maybe my few mentions of neuroconstructivism put me up there. And the short reading I did from my creative work resulted in stunned silence (still not sure if this meant they were spellbound or shocked).
Over the rest of the day I attended a couple of sessions of PhD and Masters students delivering 20 minute papers. A couple of things I learnt from attending those:
- you can talk the academic talk and be entertaining
- interesting discussions can come out of the question and answer sessions
- keep on track with your topic
- be prepared and be professional
- somewhere along the way doing your PhD, the chances are high you will lost the plot
- don't make assumptions about what you think your data is telling you
- don't give up - take a step back and work through the issues
- don't be afraid of letting your research taking you in unexpected directions
- she sat on a table swinging her legs, instead of standing
- she didn't use any visuals to help maintain audience interest and focus
- she rambled, lost her place, and jumped from idea to idea with no coherent thread
- despite getting several time warnings from the facilitator, she kept rambling on
The final session of the day was a 'debate' about the relationship between student and supervisor during the PhD process. It was more entertaining than informative and ended up, as many discussions in Australia seem to do, deciding that what was needed was more alcohol. Sigh.
But all in all it was a good day. Met some interesting people, learnt some useful stuff and had a few laughs. It was a nice, laid-back intro to the academic conference.
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