This is a Tri-fold display board that exhibits the
highlights of your Science Project. This is the first thing a person sees
when they are introduced to your project so the presentation of this component
of your Science Project is one of the most important.
Follow the guidelines illustrated below for the arrangement of your display
board as well as the placement of objects on the display board.
Make sure your display follow all Regulations
for Science Project Displays!
Left Side
This side has the question, the Hypothesis
and your Procedure.
Middle
The middle has the title as well as all your Data
(including tables, diagrams and photos).
Right Side
This side has the Results,
Conclusion as well as
how you might modify or extend your experiment in the future.
The title of your Science Project is the first thing people will see when
they look at your display board. You can use your question as your title
or you can make up something. You want the title to be catchy and to make
people interested in looking at your project.
Notice also in the illustration above that your display includes other
items.
Report:
This is the Report that you wrote. It includes the research you did and
has a full bibliography.
Model:
You may or may not have a model as part of your display. Make sure
you avoid including any prohibited materials.
Abstract:
This is a brief summary of your project.
Project Log:
This is the journal you have been keeping from the start of your
project.
SHOW & TELL
Every presentation, like your display board, has two major components.
Those components are appearance and content. These are like "show"
and "tell". The appearance is the "show". People will
want to see something attractive. It should get people’s attention
without being too overpowering. The content is like the "tell".
Your display board should give people all the information they need to
understand exactly what you were trying to do, how you did it, and what
you found out. You must make sure your presentation does a good job in
both of these areas.
DISPLAY BOARD TIPS
- Check your Display Board thoroughly for spelling
and grammar. Have your Language Arts teacher help you.
- Start early. A good Display Board is the result
of many hours of work.
- Begin now to think about what it will look like.
- Plan ahead. Make a rough sketch of the layout
of your Display Board first.
- Decide what elements will look like and how they
will be arranged. Once you start attaching things it will be too late
to change.
- Think about color, line and texture. Most display
boards are white but you can buy them in color as well. You can also
add color with different kinds of paper. Different kinds of paper can
add texture as well.
- Make sure all your graphs; tables, charts and
diagrams follow the guidelines.
Lettering is important. Other than the title,
all the lettering should be in black ink. The words should be easy to
read from ten feet away. Hand lettering takes a lot of work if you want
it neat. The three best ideas are…
- use a computer
- buy self-stick letters
- use a stencil
- Attach with care. You will be attaching
labels and text (Question, Hypothesis, etc.) to your Display Board.
If you want to attach other objects to your Display Board you may, as
long as they follow the guidelines for permissible objects. Follow some
rules…
- All attachments should be secure
- No glue or tape should be showing
- Don’t attach anything that is too heavy
(it will make your Display Board unbalanced)
|