Techniques for Organising the Written Report for Oral Presentation - StudyPulse
Boost Your VCE Scores Today with StudyPulse
8000+ Questions AI Tutor Help
Home Subjects Extended Investigation Organising report for presentation

Techniques for Organising the Written Report for Oral Presentation

Extended Investigation
StudyPulse

Techniques for Organising the Written Report for Oral Presentation

Extended Investigation
01 May 2026

Techniques for Organising the Content of a Written Report for Oral Presentation

Transforming a written research report into an effective oral presentation is a significant challenge. A report and a presentation serve different communicative purposes and follow different conventions. Understanding how to restructure and adapt content for an audience who cannot re-read, cannot linger on a figure, and must follow a live argument in real time is a distinct academic skill.

The Core Challenge

A written report can be dense, technical and exhaustive — readers can pause, re-read, and follow up references. An oral presentation must be:
- Sequential: Each point must be clear before the next is introduced
- Memorable: Key points must be reinforced, not just stated once
- Accessible: No jargon without immediate explanation
- Selective: Cover the essential argument — not every detail
- Timed: Every word counts

KEY TAKEAWAY: The oral presentation is not a spoken version of the report. It is a new document derived from the report, structured for a live audience with different processing needs.

Structuring the Oral Presentation

A standard structure for an Extended Investigation oral presentation:

Section Duration (approx) Purpose
Introduction 1–2 min State the research question and its significance; preview structure
Background / Literature 2–3 min Key context from the literature; why this question matters
Methodology 1–2 min What you did and why — briefly justified
Findings 3–4 min Key results — use visuals to support
Discussion 2–3 min What findings mean; how they relate to literature
Conclusion & Evaluation 1–2 min Answer the research question; key limitations; value of findings

Total: approximately 10–15 minutes (check VCAA requirements — timing varies).

Translating Report Structure into Presentation Structure

From Literature Review to Background Slides

  • Select 3–5 key sources, not all sources cited in the report
  • Summarise each in 1–2 sentences in plain language
  • Focus on what they establish and what gap remains
  • Connect explicitly to your research question

From Methods to Methodology Slide

  • One or two slides maximum
  • Describe the design, sample and key procedures in plain language
  • State ethical safeguards briefly
  • Justify the key methodological choices (why this method?)

From Results to Findings Slides

  • Prioritise visual presentation: well-designed charts and graphs are far more effective than tables of numbers
  • Present key findings in bold, clear statements
  • Provide only the statistical detail a non-specialist needs to understand the finding
  • Use one slide per major finding

From Discussion to “What This Means” Slides

  • Connect each finding to the literature
  • Explain what the finding adds to what was already known
  • Address unexpected or contradictory results

STUDY HINT: Write out the full spoken script for your presentation first. Then condense it to prompt notes. Then practise until the notes are guides, not scripts. Presentations read from scripts score poorly on delivery.

Visual Design Principles for Presentation Slides

  • One main idea per slide: Avoid text-heavy slides
  • 6×6 rule: Maximum 6 bullet points; maximum 6 words per point
  • Clear visual hierarchy: Title at top; content clearly subordinate
  • Readable fonts: Minimum 24pt for body text; sans-serif fonts are easier to read at distance
  • High-contrast colour: Light text on dark background, or dark text on light background
  • Data visualisations: Labelled clearly; titles state the finding, not just the data (“Screen time correlates with reduced sleep” rather than “Graph 1: Screen time vs sleep hours”)

Signposting for an Oral Audience

An oral audience cannot see where they are in the argument — you must tell them:
- Opening: “Today I’ll be presenting my investigation into… which I’ve structured in four parts.”
- Transition: “Now that I’ve outlined the existing research, let me explain how I approached this question.”
- Summary: “So to summarise the key finding…”
- Conclusion: “In conclusion, this investigation found that…”

APPLICATION: When adapting your report, use this rule: include only information the audience needs to follow the argument. Cut all supporting detail that is interesting but not essential to the conclusion. What remains is your presentation.

COMMON MISTAKE: Trying to cover everything in the report. A 10,000-word report cannot be presented in 12 minutes. The presentation is a curated argument, not a compressed report. Your credibility comes from depth in what you select, not breadth across all topics.

Table of Contents