(Version 2.4: 7/20/2008)
Research Progress Meetings (RPM's) offer the opportunity to
present ongoing research in a casual environment to colleagues
with similar interests. This is a privilege which entails a responsibility
on the part of the author to present his/her research in a polished,
clear and succinct manner, both in delivery and supporting audio-visuals.
RPM chairs have a responsibility to facilitate the setup and presentation
so that the RPM runs smoothly. Dinner hosts have the responsibility
of providing a pleasant opportunity for further interaction between
the speakers and local physicists.
Speaker Guidelines
Preparations for your talk
- RPM's are normally targeted at a cross section of the LBNL
Physics Division's physics staff and graduate students, a mixture
of high energy physicists and astrophysicists.
- The entire talk should not exceed 1 hour, including 5 minutes
for announcements and at least 5 minutes for questions, so that
the prepared presentation has a 50 minute maximum.
- Provide the RPM Committee with a title and abstract as soon
as possible after your invitation, but not later than two weeks
before the talk.
-
A projector will be provided for your laptop presentation. The speaker is expected to bring an appropriate adaptor.
- Speaker is requested to furnish a pdf or ppt version of his/her talk to the
RPM Committee for posting (subsequent to the presentation) on the RPM website.
- Check the list of previous
RPM's for related talks to avoid duplication in your presentation.
- Step back from the details of your research and think about
what this particular audience might like to learn from your work.
Keep it simple - remember, less is more.
- The atmosphere is casual and jokes and levity are always
appreciated, but in the interest of maintaining an inclusive
environment which is comfortable for everyone, please refrain
from jokes which might be sexually, racially, ethnically, or
otherwise offensive.
At the Meeting
- Tea and cookies are provided in the meeting room (in 50A-5132 unless otherwise notified) so it is
good to arrive 15 or 20 minutes early for introductions and to
chat. Also, you should allow at least 15 minutes for laptop-projector hookup.
- The talk and questions should be over by 5PM. Some people
have to leave at 5:00 for transportation, to pick up children,
etc., so please finish by 5PM.
RPM Chair Guidelines
Prior to the meeting
- Send an informal email inviting the speaker, with a cc to
the RPM Committee. Update the RPM Scheduler to indicate that
the speaker has been invited.
- As soon as the speaker accepts, inform the RPM Administrator
so he or she can send a formal invitation. Update the RPM Scheduler
to indicate acceptance.
- Contact the speaker to establish a date and get a title and
abstract as soon as possible. Inform the RPM Committee as soon
as a date has been established and update the RPM Scheduler with
this date. The RPM Administrator should add this talk to the
public List
of Upcoming RPM's as soon as possible.
- The formal invitation from the RPM Administrator should point
the speaker to these guidelines.
- The Chair is responsible for introducing the speaker unless
you have delegated this to someone else, such as the dinner host
or the person heading the job search for which the speaker is
a candidate. Prepare a brief introduction to the speaker, either
from your own sources or through discussion with the speaker
or others.
- Familiarize yourself with the controls for lights, microphones,
and a-v equipment, and the location of pointer sticks.
- With respect to A-V in alternate RPM site 50B-4205, some assistance may also
be available down the hall, from staff in the Computing Sciences
Directorate (50B-4230).
The ethernet connection is below the podium
at the left.
During the meeting
- Start the session on time, usually at 4:00 PM, even if physicists
are still arriving. Make any general announcements and then introduce
the speaker.
- Interaction and questions during the talk are fine. However,
if the audience is slowing the talk down so that you think the
speaker will not be able to finish by 5PM, ask the audience to
hold their questions until the end.
- Inform the speaker when it is 4:55 if they are not already
summarizing.
- If a speaker makes offensive or inappropriate remarks, for
example of a sexual, racial, or ethnic nature, the Chair should
immediately say that this seems inappropriate to a physics presentation
and that we should bring the discussion back to the physics topic.
- If any problems arise that you are unable to handle relative
to successfully chairing the session, either go, or immediately
send, someone to the RPM Administrative Assistant or the Physics
Division Office.
Dinner Host Guidelines
- Typically RPM speakers from out of town are taken to dinner
by a host. Often this is a different person than the RPM Committee
Chair.
- Choose a restaurant after consulting with the RPM speaker
about food preferences and restrictions.
- Invite other guests to make a total party of 3 to 6 people,
checking with the speaker to see if there are particular people
they would like invited.
- Make a reservation at a time, say 6:00PM, sufficient to allow
the speaker time for some after-talk discussion and enough time
to drive to the restaurant.
- Give restaurant address, phone, and directions to guests
and organize car-pools if appropriate.
- Pay the bill, treating the speaker. The Lab (in conjunction with UC-Berkeley) subsidizes the
meal up to $200. If the cost exceeds $200, divide the remainder,
taking into account cases where someone has had a much less expensive
meal, as is often the case with graduate students and postdocs.
- Provide Eric Essman (x5853, MS50A-5104, epessman@lbl.gov) with a Request for Reimbursement of RPM
Dinner Cost. The request can be for up to $200. Include the restaurant
name, names of all dinner guests, the total cost of the meal,
an itemized bill, and a receipt showing payment.
Back to main
RPM page or RPM
Organizer's page.
Maintained by Eric Essman