SECeduCon5 2025 Cyber Security Poster - Expression of Interest
Date/Time: Thursday 26th June 2025 | 9:30am - 5.30pm Event Address: John Niland Scientia Building, UNSW Sydney An opportunity for cybersecurity students to showcase their project work. Preferred poster size: A1, portrait orientation.Closing date for submissions: 22nd June 2025
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example@example.com
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Brief description of your poster
Ways to Submit: 1. If your poster is ready: i) You can upload it below, and we will print it for you. ii) You can print your own poster and bring it to the conference. Please confirm this in the comments section below. 2. If your poster is not yet ready, but will be in time for the conference, please let us know in the comments section below! i) Again, please indicate whether you would like us to print your poster (must be received by 22nd June 2025), or ii) whether you will print your own and bring it to the conference. If you have any specific questions, please email us at: secedu@unsw.edu.au
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Tips for Posters
When developing your poster you might like to draw on the following tips which have been adapted from Hess, George R: Effective Scientific Posters: Quick Reference Think of your poster as an illustrated abstract. Get your message across with visual displays and small blocks of supporting text. Tell readers why your work matters, what you did, what you found, and what you recommend. Avoid excessive focus on methods - it's the results and implications that count! Overall appearance. Use a pleasing arrangement of graphics, text, colours. Your poster should be neat and uncluttered - use white space to help organise sections. Balance the placement of text and figures. Organisation. Use the headings to help readers find what they're looking for: Context, objective, impact, conclusions, etc. A columnar format helps traffic flow in a crowded poster session. Minimise text - use graphics. Keep text in blocks of no more than 50-75 words - don't create large, monolithic paragraphs of prose. Use colour cautiously. Dark letters on light background are easiest to read. Stick to a theme of 2-3 colours. Avoid overly bright colours. Don't fight reader gravity, which pulls the eyes from top to bottom (first), and left to right. Prepare a verbal explanation. Colleagues may ask you to "walk them through" your poster. In making such a presentation, avoid reading the poster. Instead, give the big picture, explain why the problem
The committee reserves the final decisions on the selections posters, shortlisting criteria will include relevance to the event, quality of content, and potential for collaboration.
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