| Search
NACADA |
| |
| 2009
Annual Conference |
| General
Information |
| Conference
Brochure.pdf |
| Tentative Schedule |
| Conference
Registration Information/Form |
| Hotel
Information |
| Sharing
Hotel Accommodations |
| Airline
& Car Rental Discounts |
| Driving Directions, Parking, Maps and Shuttle/Taxi |
| New
Attendee Information |
| Interactive Schedule Planner |
| Pre-conference Workshops |
| Sessions
by Track / Advising Topic |
| Presentation
Information |
| Silent
Auction |
| Exhibitors |
| Visit San Antonio |
| Upcoming
Annual Conferences |
| Past
Annual Conferences |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
There is little more rewarding than presenting
at a Annual NACADA conference. Not only do I benefit from the research
and work of putting together the presentation, but I also enjoy
the experience of passing that information along and learn tremendous
amounts from the conference participants who attend my session.
It's a great feeling to know that the work that you do is appreciated
and the information that you present is valued and valuable. I highly
recommend presenting to everyone that I meet - present alone, present
on a panel, - just get out there and share your ideas!
Susan M. Kolls
Northeastern University
Presenting at the Annual Conference
has allowed me to share my knowledge and research with others but
more importantly has given me the opportunity to learn from a wide
range of individuals. First year advisors, advising administrators,
experienced advisors, and faculty advisors all have something to
share and bringing them together at individual sessions has allowed
me to expand on my ability to serve students and “borrow” from others. The bottom line is that advising is a very challenging and rewarding profession and one that is always a work in progress.
Blane Harding
Colorado State University
I began presenting at NACADA conferences
because I love learning from other presenters. I realized that others
might be excited to hear about some of the new things we have been
trying on our campus as well. It has been very rewarding to have
peers in my profession express their appreciation for giving them
new tools/ideas to take back to their campus. A major component
of advising is sharing knowledge... whether it's with our students
or with each other!"
Cindy Fruhwirth
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh |
|
| General Presentations Hints
|
- Effective
academic advising is provided by both full-time advisors and
faculty with advising responsibilities and duties. No doubt,
members of either group can cite both good and bad examples
of the other providing guidance to students. We request that
presenters review their presentations for examples of stereotyping,
labeling, or generalizing negative comments about the other
and delete such references. We also request that during your
presentation you assist the participants in your sessions
to avoid using the session as a stage for making negative
comments about one group of advisors or the other. TOGETHER
WE CAN ENHANCE ACADEMIC ADVISING DELIVERED BY EVERYONE ON
OUR CAMPUSES: FULL-TIME ADVISORS, FACULTY, OR ADMINISTRATORS!
REMEMBER THAT OUR PARTICIPANTS ALL HAVE A DEEP BELIEF IN EFFECTIVE
ADVISING FOR STUDENTS OR THEY WOULD NOT BE ATTENDING OUR CONFERENCE.
- Speaker
Ready Room - It is important that participants
feel you are confident and rehearsed in your session. There
will be a Speaker Ready Room available (equipped with an overhead
projector, slide projector, LCD projector, VCR, and internet
access) for presenters to use to practice, double check equipment,
or store material for their sessions - use this room whenever
you like. Ask when you check-in at the conference for the
room's exact location or look on the map in your program for
the "Speaker Ready Room".
An AV chart
showing all equipment previously requested by each presenter
will be posted inside the room and on the bulletin board near
the registration table.
- Locate
and preview your presentation room PRIOR
to your session. All concurrent sessions will be set "theatre
style" (rows of chairs, no tables) or "classroom style"
(rows of tables and chairs). There will be a head table, chairs,
and either a tabletop or floor podium in the front of the
room. Rooms seating more than 90 people will have a microphone
on the podium.
- Begin
and end your presentation on time . You may
want to have someone assist you in handling the distribution
and collection of the evaluation forms at your session so
you will not have to worry about that. Volunteers are assigned
to help in each room with evaluations, but as we all know;
things do not always work as planned! In addition, the person
you ask to assist you could help in distributing material
if you need such assistance. All individual sessions are 60
minutes. It is important to end your session on time to provide
the next presenters with the opportunity to set up.
- Your
material and comments should match the program abstract
you have provided. It is important that your presentation
covers the information and topics you have outlined in your
abstract; it can be frustrating when participants have chosen
your session based on your abstract and you do not clearly
cover the topics they are expecting. This is the number
one complaint on the evaluation forms.
- Do
not read your presentation or even portions
of it. Word-for-word reading should only be used in rare instances
for the purpose of emphasizing a point or fact. Limit your
notes for the session to key ideas or phrases that automatically
bring to mind your ideas for delivery.
- Contact
information : Distribute business cards or
have contact information on your handouts. Participants appreciate
being able to contact you after the conference for more information
concerning your presentation, to ask questions they may think
of later, or to ask for your assistance when they return to
their campuses.
- Questions
and answers time should be incorporated into
the presentation . Not having enough time has been a frequent
complaint from past participants at our conferences. Presenters
are encouraged to leave at least 10-15 minutes at the end
of the session for questions and/or discussion of your topic
or you should plan accordingly so that participants may ask
questions as you present your information.
- Handouts:
we suggest bringing a minimum of 100 copies
of your handouts. If you are presenting a "hot topic" you
will want to bring more. If you have leftover handouts, there
is a table located in the exhibit hall for handouts, this
way anyone who was unable to attend your session can pick
up your handouts. Also, upload your
presentation handouts to the NACADA web site; this way
if you do run out of handouts you can tell the attendees that
they can find all of your handouts on the web and it will
keep them from having to carry so much paper back home.
- Evaluations:
Please allow time to take up evaluation forms
from all participants attending your session. Hopefully a
volunteer will be available to run the evaluations back to
the Hospitality Desk for you, if not we ask that you return
the packet to the desk. The evaluations are very important
for our conference. In addition to providing you valuable
feedback on your session, the evaluations are extremely valuable
to the next year's conference planning committee. Prior evaluations
are used in the program selection process. Your copy of the
evaluation forms can be picked up approximately one hour after
your session at the hospitality desk. All evaluations not
picked up by presenters will be available for a short time
by contacting the Executive Office. We will hold the evaluations
that are not picked up for 2 months before discarding.
|
|
|