Workshop Opportunities

Planning to present at Student Research Days? Take advantage of these support opportunities as you prepare!

Poster and Abstract Preparation with Stephen Disrud, Center for Writers
Wednesday, February 17 | 12-2 pm | Memorial Union, Prairie Rose Room

Communicating Science with Fred Hudson, Research & Creative Activity
Tuesday, March 3 | 10am-12pm | Memorial Union, Prairie Rose Room

Register for a workshop

All communications regarding this event will be made through the official NDSU email system (using your ndsu.edu email address).

By completing the registration process for Student Research Days, you authorize the publication of your first and last name with your abstract.

The Student Research Days event will be open to the public. Please ensure that any materials presented can be released publicly.

If you have questions, please contact ndsu.researchdev@ndsu.edu

All NDSU undergraduate students in all fields of study are eligible to participate.

We encourage both poster and oral presentations from students at all levels. Eligible projects can be completed works or can be works-in-progress. If the project is a work-in-progress, the presenter should include information about planned next steps and goals for the project in their presentation.

Projects generated collaboratively by student groups are eligible.

  • Groups are limited to four participants.
  • Only one abstract submission is needed from a group.

Projects or papers utilizing human or animal research subjects must have approval from the appropriate compliance committees.

If you have questions regarding eligibility, please contact ndsu.researchdev@ndsu.edu

8:30 am - 9:45 am Student Registration and Set-up: Posters
10 am - 12 pm Undergraduate Student Poster Session
12 pm - 12:15 pm Take down posters
12 pm - 1:15 pm Student Registration and Set-up: Oral Presentations
1:30 pm - 3 pm Undergraduate Oral Presentation Session
3:30 pm - 4 pm Awards

This schedule is tentative and subject to change.

Poster Presentations:

As a presenter during a poster session, you will stand by your poster for the duration of the session and respond to questions from an audience that moves throughout the room, visiting the various posters. Most interactions with audience members are around 5 minutes.

  1. Please create your poster according to content conventions in your discipline. Your project mentor or class instructor should be able to advise you on this topic.
  2. Poster size should not exceed 3' x 4' (36 inches x 48 inches).
  3. Display equipment in the form of flex screens and pins will be provided. If your project has other set-up needs, please contact ndsu.researchdev@ndsu.edu
  4. Design and Sign provides large format printing for academic posters.

Oral Presentations:

As a presenter during an oral presentation session, you will stand in the front of a small room and present your project or paper directly to a seated audience. The audience generally remains in the room for the entire session.

  1. Presentations will be limited to 8 minutes in length, followed by approximately 2 minutes for questions.
    1. Timecards will be shown to you during your presentation to remind you of the remaining time.
    2. Extended time can be requested, but we may not be able to accommodate all such requests.
  2. Slides or other visual aids are not required, but computers, internet, and projectors will be available in each of the oral presentation rooms to accommodate the use of presentation aids (such as PowerPoint).
    1. If you choose to use slides, you will need to bring your presentation with you to your session on a USB flash drive or other portable storage device.

Other Presentations:

If your presentation does not fit into the structure of either a poster or oral presentation, please reach out to ndsu.researchdev@ndsu.edu to describe your project / presentation so that we can determine the best way to represent your project.

Abstracts are not collected as part of the registration form, but will be collected after your registration form is received. Both registration forms AND abstracts are due by the registration deadline.

After you have completed your registration form, you will receive an email with instructions for submitting your abstract into the registration portal.

An abstract is required for each project, and must be submitted in Microsoft Word format.

Abstracts must include the following information:

  1. Final project title
  2. Presenter Name
  3. Faculty Mentor Name and Department
  4. Concise Summary of your project, no more than 350 words.

Please be certain that you use correct grammar and spelling as your information will appear in the abstract book as submitted.

Abstracts should provide a concise summary of your project. Abstracts commonly include the following components:

  • Motivation or Statement of Problem: Why do we care about the problem? What practical, theoretical, scientific, or artistic gap is your project filling?
  • Methods or Approach: What did you actually do to get your results? Did you approach your subject using a specific theoretical framework, technical procedure, or methodology?
  • Results or Product (either actual or expected, depending on where you are in the process): As a result of completing the procedure or investigation, what did you learn, create, or invent? (Or what do you expect to learn, create, or invent upon completion?)
  • Conclusions or Implications: What are the larger implications of your findings, especially for the problem or gap identified in step one?

Poster Session Awards

  • First Place - $300
  • Second Place - $200
  • Third Place - $100

Oral Presentation Awards
The number of oral presentation awards will depend on the number of participants in this category. At minimum, one (1st place/$300) award will be given. If more than one award is given, the award amounts will be as follows:

  • First Place - $300
  • Second Place - $200
  • Third Place - $100

Evaluation

Projects will be evaluated based on content, presentation, and any supporting documentation or visual aids (i.e., posters or a slide deck). Criteria that will be considered when judging presentations can be viewed here.

Ready to Register?

Make sure you have the following information before registering:

  1. Contact information (for you and your faculty mentor)
  2. Title of your presentation / project
  3. Type of presentation (oral / poster)

Registration closes March 18, 2026.

Register now