please create a post or session based on the documents given.
A poster session advertises your research. It combines text and graphics to make a visually pleasing presentation. Typically, a professional poster involves showing your work to numerous researchers at a conference or seminar. In our case, it will take place in one large room and your fellow researchers are your classmates. As viewers walk by, your poster should quickly and efficiently communicate your research. Unlike the fast pace of a slide show or verbal presentation, a Poster Session allows viewers to study and restudy your information and discuss it with you one on one. You should also give a short presentation (or “pitch,” more on that below) on your research every ten or fifteen minutes as viewers cycle through.
How to Make a Poster
A successful poster is not created overnight. Preparing a well-organized, visually pleasing, eye-catching poster requires you to plan well in advance. First, consider your audience and what type of poster you’ll create. Next, gather your supplies and decide what information to include. Note that you will have to distill/condense your work in some way, because it won’t all fit on the poster (no wall of text, please). From this point, create the text and graphics. Remember to consider how these components work together to project the information you want to share and then format your poster accordingly.
Developing your poster’s content may seem like a breeze. After all, you just have to cut and paste parts of your paper onto the board, right? Wrong! To be successful, a poster requires planning how you will depict specific information and providing text and graphics to capture your audience’s attention. The final material that goes on a poster is quite unlike what most researchers and writers generally write for other contexts. The poster session calls for much more attention to visual impact than other forms of writing do. And the restricted space of a poster requires careful condensing of ideas that we would write about at length for other forums.
Unlike a research-based paper, which might run from 15 to 80 pages (or more), a standard poster session will include only about 3-4 pages of single-spaced text or graphics in 12-point font (i.e., before formatting for the poster). In other words, writers for posters have very little space, particularly if they have to explain complex ideas or research. The key to crafting a good poster, then, is to focus as narrowly as possible on the central ideas you need to convey. You just won’t have room to explain relationships among ideas in any detail, so pick out what’s central to your topic and concentrate on that narrow focus. Express your ideas visually in a sequenced, well-ordered, and obvious way. When possible/relevant, let graphs, flowcharts, illustrations, and images tell the story.
pls make the poster following the guidelines and base it on the essay
the poster need to be an a1 size, so means you can just make 8 a4 slides that can later combine together as a big one.
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