Examinations

In general, we expect you to critically examine the literature and integrate it into your own argumentation framework for term papers and presentations. A clear structure, precise references, and critical, independent reflection are essential to the quality of your work.

Term papers / essays

Term papers, essays, reviews (= academic texts) and similar assignments serve the purpose of reflective analysis of content in written form. This necessarily and inevitably involves engaging with existing ideas, meaning with texts written by other authors, as well as developing your own arguments. You should take the time to deal with a subject (author, study, concept, text, work, method, etc.) in more or less detail.

All written assignments will be discussed in advance during the relevant course and reviewed with your instructor during their office hours. For more detailed information, please refer to this info sheet (PDF, 74 KB).

Please note that all written work must include a signed declaration of originality provided by the Institute of Sociology. You can download both the German (PDF, 59 KB) and English (PDF, 601 KB) versions.

We highly recommend the services offered by the LMU Writing Center to train your writing skills. They offer numerous courses and workshops, including individual counseling.

Presentations

You will be asked to give presentations, especially in seminars. Please have a look at the following guidelines on structure and the art of presentation.

Typical structure of a presentation:

1. Basic argument / theory

2. Brief description of data and methods

3. Key findings

4. Discussion/methodological evaluation of findings

Please also note the following:

  • Try to build up suspense. To do this, you need a clear and exciting research question/thesis, which you develop and work through in your presentation.
  • The first slide is a title slide: topic, authors, location of the presentation. You should also briefly introduce yourself.
  • This is followed by an introduction. You know what it's going to be about, but your audience doesn't! The ability to empathize is important here: where can I meet my audience?
  • A presentation should not be a simple retelling from the text - that would be too much information and would cause the audience to “switch off.” You should consider how much information the audience can process in the given time. Hint: It's not much! Therefore, leave out many details (footnotes) and limit yourself to the basic lines of argumentation.
  • Do not put continuous text on the slides, but rather bullet points that serve as “milestones” of your argument.
  • Avoid long direct quotations from sources (e.g., several sentences), unless they are absolutely necessary to your discussion.

  • Sans serif font (Arial)
  • Smallest font size: 20pt
  • It takes about 2 minutes to design a slide like this. So, if you have 20 minutes, you should have a maximum of 10 slides.
  • Remove any unnecessary slides before the presentation. Include any additional material that may be helpful for the discussion in the appendix (backup).
  • Another typical error: huge tables with lots of numbers that are no longer legible. Only present excerpts from the table with the key results.
  • Ideally, statistical results should be presented graphically (e.g., the key regression effects as a bar chart or coefficient plot, etc.).
  • Make sure the presentation is high-contrast (black text on a white/light background).

  • Practice your presentation at least once under realistic conditions (ideally in front of a test audience). This will allow you to check whether you are staying within the time frame.
  • Speak to your audience, not to the computer or the screen. Do not read your presentation!
  • Set signposts again and again: “Today I would like to answer three questions ...”
  • Build bridges between slides: “Now that I have answered the first question with ‘yes,’ I will move on to the second...”
  • Emphasize highlights: “This is a remarkable result.”
  • If you are giving the presentation together with other students, be sure to coordinate the content! Under no circumstances should you prepare several unrelated presentations instead of one unified presentation.