Individual Final Project

MIT/Harvard/Wellesley
Final Project Presentations
(▶️Recording | 💻Slides)
Global Committed Listener
Final Project Presentations
(recording & slides to be posted)
For your Individual Final Project, write up your project and results on your HTGAA webpage following the guidelines below. You will also create a presentation and present it live:
- MIT/Harvard students: present from your writeup on your HTGAA webpages and have a 6-minute presentation time limit
- Global Committed Listeners: prepare 3 Google slides and present those 3 slides from a shared Google Slides deck with a 3-minute presentation time limit.
Please practice your presentation a few times and time yourself to polish your delivery and to be sure it fits within the time constraints!
Important Dates
Feb 25, 2026: Share 3 Individual Final Project ideas (1 slide each, in Google slide deck to be provided)
Mar 18, 2026: Finalize Individual Final Project topic; send TAs Twist designs
Apr 30 & May 1, 2026: Final project open Lab sessionn #1 (MIT/Harvard)
May 7 & 8, 2026: Final project open Lab sessionn #2 (MIT/Harvard)
May 12, 2026: MIT / Harvard Individual Final Project presentations (~3 Hours)
May 12, 2026, 2pm ET: Global Committed Listener deadline for having finished slides in provided slide deck
May 13, 2026: Global Committed Listener Individual Final Project presentations (~9-12 Hours)
Slide guidelines for Global Committed Listener presentations:
- You will be presenting entirely from the shared slide deck with the moderator advancing slides; the moderator will not follow links outside the deck during the presentation. (Links are allowed for later reference, but will not be used while presenting.) Since the moderator is advancing slides, it’s best if you don’t use any click-to-animate steps in your slides.
- Do not change the time of your presentation or relative position of your slides in the shared slide deck.
- Use text which is large enough to be readable when the slide is presented inside a Zoom window on a laptop screen. Resist the urge to cram text on the slide in tiny font!
- Create your slides inside Google Slides (in any deck, probably first in your own private slide deck, later copying into the shared deck when that is provided), not in graphic design tools like Canva (which will usually result in attractive slides which are unreadable on Zoom). Place text inside text boxes on the Google Slide, place images in individually, etc. Don’t paste in one big image per slide with all slide content!
- These slides are not posters; don’t try to fit a poster’s worth on content on a slide, it will be unreadable. The restriction to 3 slides is also not a challenge to see if you can fit 4 or 6 or 8 slides on each of your slides.
- Start making your slides early! Don’t wait for the shared deck to begin creating your slides; the shared deck will only be available to copy your slides into a couple days before the deadline.
- Don’t edit the “themes” or “page setup” in the slide deck! You’ll be sharing a deck and themes with all CLs. Apply any styling edits directly on your 3 slides. After pasting your slides into the shared deck, click “Slideshow” there in the shared deck to see what your slides will look like during final presentations and avoid any unpleasant surprises.
- If you don’t have your slides in the shared deck by the deadline, you will not be able to present your final project (a required step in earning an HTGAA Certificate of Completion).
- Join for as much of the final presentations as possible to support your classmates and colleagues, but show up in zoom at least 15 minutes before your own presentation time. We may be running ahead of or behind schedule, so be as early as you can, and be prepared to stay as late as you can.
Supporting Documents
Links will be emailed out to applicable & qualifying students when they are needed:
- (Signup sheets for a presentation slot)
- (Presentation deck)
- (A schedule of MIT/Harvard TA availability for lab work)
- (Signup sheet for MIT/Harvard Lab slots)