Engineering is the practise of creating, constructing, designing and operating structures, machines, devices, systems, materials and processes using knowledge from science, mathematics and practical experience. The constructed environment, energy production, space exploration, the creation of new technologies and the growth of medical science all fall under this broad category.
Engineering is a crucial component of the modern world and it has an impact on all facets of existence. For thousands of years, people have employed engineering to solve problems, erect structures and develop new technologies. Engineering was employed by ancient civilizations including the Egyptians and the Greeks to build monuments, dams, canals and other constructions. Engineering was utilized in the mediaeval times to construct fortifications, make mechanical gadgets and invent new industrial techniques. Engineering made considerably greater progress throughout the industrial revolution as new technologies were created to increase production efficiency.
Speaker Guidelines
Organize your research
- State the hypothesis and purpose of your research.
- Describe your methods of investigation.
- Include data collected and what was learned.
- Give conclusions based on the collected data.
- Emphasize the significance and highlights of the research.
Shape your presentation
- Make sure your notes highlight the key aspects of your speech.
- Both your slide sequence and your talk's delivery should be practiced. Make sure your speech matches the allowed time.
- Simple sentences are best. Steer clear of specialist terminology, jargon and unfamiliar acronyms.
- Prepare your responses to any questions you may be asked.
- Your talk should be amplified by the audio-visuals, not repeated.
- If it isn't directly related to your research, don't integrate any music, movie clips, or other copyrighted content with your presentation. If you must use music, movie clips, or other similar content, be sure it is either open source or that you have the right to use it under copyright. Display your work in the best possible way; avoid using words where an image (graphs, tables, charts, etc.)
- Use pie graphs to represent relative sections of a whole; line graphs to indicate trends; bar graphs to compare magnitudes.
- A clear, uncluttered and easily readable supporting audio-visual should be included. You should use a font that is at least eighteen points or bigger. This is crucial since user screen sizes fluctuate when presenting to an online audience.