for organizers
There should be at least two poster awards
Many conferences have some sort of awards for “Best student poster.” But John Vanek recently noted something I pointed out early on in this blog: the winners are often not very good looking posters.
Pet peeve: when posters that are simply walls of text win best poster awards, despite all the advice that stresses not to do that.
This is not surprising. I’ve judged many presentations, and there is always some sort of scoring sheet to guide the judges. Those scoring schemes always weight the content of the presentation (whether poster or talk) more heavily than the visual excellence of the presentation.
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If you are going to judge poster presentations, make two awards.
- Give one award purely for the scientific content of the poster. Does it have a clear hypothesis, appropriate controls, important finding, and so one.
- Give one award purely for the visual excellence of the poster. I already have a checklist ready for judges!
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Related posts
The Better Posters checklist
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