Final presentation
Last week I gave you an outline of what the final report should look like. For inspiration on how to present your results, please consult this amazing guide. A few additional rules apply:
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Each group has no more than seven minutes. If you're not finished presenting in seven, I'll will have to cut you off and grade based on what you managed to fit in.
After each presentation, we will have time for a question from the audience and a question from me and/or the TAs.
Focus on what you think the audience should know because it's important to them, rather than retelling what you did: focus on the question and the result, less on technical details (unless you did something you want to particularly share with your audience because it's important for them to know).
Avoid text on the slides unless abosolutely neccessary - use single sentence statements or figures.
To make sure your figures look good up on the projector save them as pdf, do not take screenshots from the notebook:
plt.savefig('filename.pdf', bbox_inches='tight')
And of course, make sure you always label your axes.
More data analysis with Python
Download the starter notebook by right clicking and choosing "Save as...". Then, follow the instructions.
(c) Piotr Sapieżyński, 2019