Biology 100L: General Biology Laboratory
Guidelines for Presentations
Each of you independently will make a five-minute presentation on a current topic in biology that relates to, but does not repeat, the topics being covered in class. These are worth 80 points. The topics relate to the previous weekÕs subject so you will demonstrate the relationship between previous material and the lab topic that day. Presentations are intended to draw upon your personal experiences, so pick a topic you find interesting, or has personal meaning to you (for example, a disease diagnosis in your family). The table below shows how you will be graded for this activity, and the back has topic examples. See the sign-up sheet in class to sign up for the week/topic of your choice. Points will be deducted for each week you postpone your topic. If you donÕt meet minimum standards (for example, you clearly have little idea what your talking aboutÉ) your presentation will be delayed until you do meet minimum standards, and the point penalties will be applied. IMPORTANT: Be sure to check your file compatibility! Our labs presentation computers are MacBooks with MS Office 2008. They can run Power point 2008, or Apple Keynote. Save your files so they will run in one of these presentation programs! Bring your presentation on a USB RAM (ÒjumpÓ or ÒflashÓ) drive.
Criteria |
Points |
Comments |
Relevance |
7 |
Specifically state how your topic relates to what the class is covering and why it is important to you. |
Knowledge |
8 |
Make sure you understand your topic and include new information about it (Way beyond what was covered in class) Check pronunciation of words in a dictionary or glossary |
Preparation |
20 |
Put your name and topic on the board when you come into class Rehearse your talk so that it falls within the 4-5 minute limit (you will stopped after 5 minutes). Your materials should show evidence of preparation, not evidence of being pasted together that morning. Have your materials and equipment ready. Understand the points you are making. Bring backup if you are making a digital presentation such as power point. USB drives (ÒJump drives, RAM drivesÓ) are best. |
Presentation |
15 |
Look at your audience, not at your notes or the screen Speak in a conversational tone, clearly and loudly enough to be heard. Do not just ÒreadÓ your notes or use a monotone. Avoid using distracting terms (ÒlikeÓ, Òhuh,Ó Òwell,Ó Òya know,Ó ÒyÕnum sayinÕ?Ó) or weakening slang (ÒkindaÓ, ÒsortaÓ) Enunciate and speak at a moderate pace |
Visuals |
15 |
Use 2-12 visuals to illustrate your topic and make sure they can be seen. Text on your visuals must be readable at the far corners of the lab. Credit will be given for visuals that demonstrate creativity, effort, and support of your topic. Use your visuals when you refer to them. Use of the whiteboard does not count as a visual |
Organization |
10 |
Present your information logically and coherently Use an outline to organize your thoughts. Summarize your talk by restating your main point(s) |
References |
5 |
Consult at least two outside references to support your presentation. Submit your outline with your visuals and bibliography at the end of your talk. |
Oops! 30% of Visuals contain text that is too small to be read from the back of a classroom.
50% of Visuals are printed directly off the internet or copied out of a book without crediting them
40% of people do not rehearse their presentation- and it really shows!
These folks read their info like theyÕve never heard it before, take too long, or stumble over critical words. They canÕt answer questions like ÒWhatÕs the relationship between natural selection and evolution?Ó
60% of people speak directly about the overall topic covered the previous week, as in: ÒToday IÕm going to talk about mitosisÉÓ Well, what about it??! You must say something that takes the topic beyond the introduction you got the previous week. Take a Maximum of 1 minute to review the previous weekÕs material. After the intro youÕll have 4 minutes to develop the real presentation.
Finally, about 25% of people clearly do not understand what they are talking about.
If you donÕt understand it, donÕt say it! (Always a good rule for life.)
Presentation Topic Suggestions
These are only suggestions. You are welcome to select any topic that you think is appropriate for that week - check with your instructor to be sure. If you change your topic notify your instructor in advance!
Find something you care about, it really helps!
Week/Date |
Previous Lab Topics |
Examples |
4 / Feb 6 |
Scientific method, Cell Chemistry/ Nutrition |
Misinterpretations of the scientific method by the public Do Òfat-dissolving enzymesÓ work? |
5 /Feb 13 |
Enzymes |
Human liver enzymes and why they always check them during blood tests. What are Òcardiac enzymesÓ and who cares? Enzymatic cleaners: what products use them andÉ |
6 / Feb 20 |
Diffusion and Osmosis |
Kidney function; How alcohol makes you drunk (and the specific role of osmosisÉ) Salmon and their changing physiology during migration |
7 / Feb 27 |
Photosynthesis/ Respiration |
Daytime plant chemistry versus night time. Human uses for anaerobic respiration. Life without photosynthesis (deep sea vents) |
8/ Mar 5 |
DNA structure, DNA Fingerprinting |
Use in solving crimes; DNA & biometrics in individual ID, DNA and RNA viruses, DNA in conservation biology, DNA and cladistics |
9 / Mar 12 |
Mitosis, Meiosis |
Mitosis and asexual reproduction. The importance of mitosis to cloning. Human mitosis after deathÉ Stem-cell research (embryonic vs otherwise), Difference between making human sperm and eggs, Disruptions in meiosis: the consequences |
10 / Mar 19 |
Sex Linkage, Human Genetics |
Any genetic disease (Tay Sachs, Ankylosing spondylitis, genetic breast cancer) Sex-linked vs sex-influenced traits. Human evolution & disease |
12/ Apr 2 |
Evolution |
Evolution of viruses in rabbit populations, pesticide resistance in insects, Island gigantism (eg the Island night lizard on our own Channel Islands) |
13/ Apr 9 |
Cladistics & Kingdoms of Life |
San Diego beaches and storm drain runoff, Endangered San Diego habitats, Tecate cypress and ThorneÕs hairstreak. Extreme thermal tolerance. ÒKey speciesÓ such as elephants or coast live oak, and their role. |
14/ Apr 16 |
Population Ecology |
Artificial & natural control of exploding populations of introduced species. Detection methods for threatened populations. Specific population declines. Snorkel with leopard sharks and describe their migrations, etc. |
15/ Apr 23 |
Biodiversity |
Biodiversity of large animals vs. small (eg ants, beetles) human-caused extinctions (StellarÕs sea cow, Ivory-billed woodpecker, Passenger pigeon, Xerces blue, California grizzly bear, etc) Role of blue-green bacteria in the evolution of all living things. CA biodiversity compared to other statesÉ. |
16 / Apr 30 |
Protein synthesis/ Genetic engineering |
Protein synthesis and hair loss. Recombinant production of insulin; Bioluminescence in biotechnology, Genetically engineered foods: pros and cons. Bacteria in tanks growing tons of medicine. |
Many people earn 80 points by giving excellent presentations. This dramatically helps your grade. DonÕt miss this opportunity by throwing together something the morning of the presentation. Do a presentation youÕd like to see!