IEW Student Global Research Symposium
Global Research Challenge Competition
This years competition takes place on Thursday November 21, 2024
Meet at 11am - Baker Center Room 230
During International Education Week (IEW), students (all academic levels) are invited to present their internationally focused research or creative activity through a Global Research Challenge: Present your Research in Minutes competition.
Information about last years competition and the winners is below -- read on and consider joining this fun and engaging event!
Congratulations to the 2024 Global Research Symposium Winners
1st Place: Nida Ajmal - "Exploring the novel role of Ras related GTPase, Diras2, in pancreatic islets for identifying Type 1 Diabetes therapeutic target"
2nd Place: Jessica Chima Eme - "The Implementation Gap: Systemic Barriers to Curriculum Decolonization in Ghanaian Basic Schools"
3rd Place: Atefeh Ahmadbeigi - "Thermodynamic modeling and molecular simulation of water and impurities' solubility in supercritical carbon dioxide"
People's Choice: Thien Pham - "Will I fit in?": International Students' Decision in Communication Self-Information and Sense of Belonging, Uncertainty Reduction, and Self-Image During Student Organizations' First Meetings"
Participation Rules and Judging Criteria
About
This competition is based upon but is not affiliated with the 3-Minute Thesis format created by The University of Queensland in 2008. 3MT is not an exercise in trivializing or ‘dumbing-down' research. Still, it challenges students to consolidate their ideas and research discoveries so they can be presented concisely to a non-specialist audience.
During IEW, this Student Global Research Symposium: Global Research Challenge: Present Your Research in Minutes allows students of all levels a chance to share their research and creative activity with Global Impact in a presentation format which effectively and concisely shares their project of research.
Rules
- A single static PowerPoint slide is requested (no slide transitions, animations or 'movement' of any kind, the slide is to be presented from the beginning of the oration).
- No additional electronic media (e.g. sound and video files) are permitted.
- No additional props (e.g. costumes, musical instruments, laboratory equipment) are permitted.
- Presentations are limited to 3 minutes maximum and competitors exceeding 3 minutes are disqualified.
- 1-Minute and 15-second warning flags will be provided
- Presentations are to be spoken word (e.g. no poems, raps or songs).
- The decision of the adjudicating panel is final.
Judging
Overarching Judging Categories
- Content & Relevance
- Structuer & Organization
- Engagement & Delivery
- Originality & Global Impact
Specific Criteria
Adjudication will be based on Presenters’ ability to thoroughly and briefly discuss the following prompts:
- Introduce themself and their department
- Description of the Research
- Provide an overview of your Research/ Thesis topic
- Why did you choose this topic or complete this research?
- Specify the question you are trying to answer or the problem your research seeks to address
- What is the research significance?
- Methodology used
- Why should we care?
- Discuss the Global impact of the research
- What stakeholders benefit from results? (e.g. scientific community, local populations, academic)
- Describe impact, key results, or outcomes
Presentation Tips
- Thoughtfully select information on your presentation slide
- Did the PowerPoint slide enhance the presentation? Is it engaging, but clear, legible, and concise?
- Did the presentation:
- Provide an understanding of the background of the research question and its significance?
- Clearly describe the key results of the research including conclusions and outcomes?
- Follow a clear and logical sequence?
- Did the presenter:
- Explain the terminology?
- Provide adequate background information to illustrate points?
- Spend adequate time on each element of the presentation, or elaborate for too long on one aspect, or seem rushed?
Engagement
- Did the language and presentation content make the audience want to know more? Was the presenter careful not to trivialize or generalize the research?
- Did the presenter:
- Convey investment in the research?
- Capture and maintain the audience’s attention?
Awards and Prizes
Cash prizes* awarded to:
- 1st place ($500)
- 2nd place ($350)
- 3rd place ($200)
- People's Choice ($100)
Deadlines
- Registration Deadline Extended - Friday, November 1, 2024, by 12:00 Noon
- Single Powerpoint Examples, Submission Deadline -Friday, November 8, 2024, by 11:59 PM
- Email to globalaffairs@ohio.edu
Format
Round 1 Adjudication
Thursday, Nov. 21, 2024
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Baker Center - Report to Baker 230 to confirm your Room Assignment and Presentation Time
Several concurrent Round 1 adjudications will select 2 Presentations which advance to the Final Round
Eligibility
- International and Domestic Students of any level (undergraduate, masters, doctoral)
- Must be enrolled as a student during Fall 2024 semester, when the competition takes place
*All participants must be available to participate in both the Round 1 Adjudication (Nov. 21, 11:00-1:00) and Final Round (Nov. 21, 1:30-2:30).
Resources
Videos of past Graduate College 3MT competitions can be found at
Remember, your participation can reflect current or past research!
Registrations open until November 1, 2024