Poster Creation Tips
- Keep your poster simple and brief. A poster is not a place for you to tack up your
entire body of research for people to read. Instead, think of a poster as a series
of highly efficient, organized “panels” (a storyboard) upon which appear synopses
of the relevant information you want to convey - just enough to get your point across.
- Organize your poster materials using headings, such as “Introduction,” “The Research
Question,” “The Methodology,” and “Findings.” These headings will help establish a
logical flow to your poster.
- Use large enough fonts so people will not have to squint to read the material. For
headings, use at least a 48-point font. For text, use nothing less than 18-point.
- Make your poster visually appealing. Have fun. Be creative. Incorporate color. Use
photographs, graphs, charts, maps, and the like. Simplify charts and figures to include
only relevant information. Be attentive to the layout and placement of your materials.
- Place the title of your work in a prominent position on your poster. Include your
name, your mentor’s name and your UNT college. [For example, if you are a TAMS student
but researching under a biology professor, please include College of Science. If you
are an Honors College student, please include the Honors College and the college of
your mentor.]
- There are many YouTube videos to assist you in creating a research poster. Here are
a few we like:
- Ask your UNT faculty mentor to proof your work. Your poster represents you, your mentor,
and your college. Take great care to plan and organize it well. Make sure it communicates
the intended information in an interesting, visual manner.
General Guidelines for Submitting Art/Creative Works to the Student Poster Session
- Please note that students must make their own transport and display arrangements.
The Honors College provides shared long boards. The student must always accompany
the creative work to ensure security. No tables or access to electrical outlets will
be available to Student Poster presenters.
- Students must create a standard poster that provides more information about the work
of art that may include method of construction; technical aspects; context in the
larger world of art; social/philosophical/aesthetic implications; sources of inspiration,
etc.
- The abstract should state clearly the medium/format of the artwork and then briefly
mention important technical, aesthetic, critical, and historical information. The
goal is to give the reviewers some basic academic information they can use to evaluate
the significance of the product. Does it emerge from one particular school of aesthetics?
Was it created in response to a particular historical or social event? Does it demonstrate
a particularly important technique? Is it innovative in some way? An abstract doesn't
allow much room to answer these questions, so the student will need to pick and choose,
but the best abstracts will give a clear impression of why the piece of art is significant
and worthy of display in a national setting.
Branding Guidelines
The Honors College will print your poster for free provided that the background is
white, your poster is configured correctly (correct names, no obvious misspellings
in the title, and UNT college and logo are included) and you meet the strict deadline
for print submission.
- Please use one of the formats below for your Title area.
Title of Research Poster Your Name, Your Affiliation (i.e. Honors College, McNair Scholar, Terry Scholar, or
Department) Mentor(s) Name (include credentials i.e. PhD, if appropriate), Mentor's Department,
Mentor's University
|
Research Title Student Name(s), Honors College Other Contributor(s) Richard Feynman, Department, University Dr. Stephen Hawking, Department, University
|
Research Title Student Name(s)1, Mentor Name(s) Dr. Albert Einstein2 1Honors College, University of North Texas 2Department of Physics, University of North Texas
|
- Posters must include an official UNT logo or lockup in accordance with the official branding guidelines.
3. Please spell out "University of North Texas" in full
If you have any general questions, contact the Scholars Day coordinator, David Waters
at David.Waters@unt.edu