Poster Presentations

In contrast to an oral presentation, a “poster” is a visual representation of the research project that must convey the essence of your message. In effect, it “talks” for the researcher. The poster presenter is on hand to answer questions and provide additional details. Keep in mind that the poster needs to attract attention from 10 feet away so include a large, interesting photo or design. Also include more detail for closer, secondary inspection while avoiding text-heavy posters.

Design

Size

Determine the size of your poster before you start.

With Undergraduate Research Showcase (URS) and Idaho Conference on Undergraduate Research (ICUR), the required poster size is 36 inches tall and 48 inches wide.

How to change your poster size

Images and Color

Content

Student Poster Templates

The links below invite you to make a copy of the file. This gives you the change to make the template your own.

General Format

While posters are not uniform most generally include the following:

Sharing Your Poster Digitally

If you are sharing your poster digitally, there are a couple steps you can take to ensure everyone can access the information in the same way.

Describe Images, Charts, and Graphs

Not all users can perceive images in the same way. Adding a short alternative text description allows all users to interpret the meaning of your images. For directions on adding alternative text in PowerPoint, see Add alternative text to a shape, picture, chart, SmartArt graphic, or other objects.

Use Accessible Colors

Having accessible colors on your poster ensures everyone can read your content easily. Use colors that have enough contrast between the background and foreground. You can check if your colors have enough contrast with a Contrast Checker like the one available from WebAIM or use one of the pre-designed templates available from Boise State.

Check Accessibility

Before saving your final draft, use the “Check Accessibility” feature in PowerPoint. Select File, Check for Issues, Check Accessibility and follow the recommendations in the report. Most likely this will include adding alt text to any images you may have missed.

Save your poster as a PDF, PowerPoint, or an Image File

When you finish designing your poster, save a copy as an image file (JPG or PNG), a PDF, or a Slide Deck (Google Slides or PowerPoint). Your choice of file type depends on where you are sharing your poster. We currently host posters on a specialized research platform called Fourwaves. Fourwaves accepts files in .png, .gif., .jpg, .jpeg or .pdf formats.

Additional Resources