Illustration

Planning a 10‑minute AI presentation

CEFR: B2

Read/Listen first

Next week I must give a ten‑minute talk about how our team uses AI. I will prepare short slides with one clear point on each. I want to sound confident, so I will practise with a timer and reduce text on the screen. If I feel nervous, I will breathe, smile, and start with a simple question. The goal is to show helpful use cases and one pain point, not to cover everything.

⚡ Learning goals

  • I can outline a short presentation with clear steps.
  • I can give practical advice for confident delivery.
  • I can summarise use cases and pain points concisely.

✨ Key language

  • PechaKucha-style “Use quick slides: one idea per slide.”
  • timeboxed practice “Practise with a strict timer.”
  • opening question “Start with a short, friendly question.”

⚙️ Rules & Grammar — 4 Structures

1️⃣ Future with will / going to

Rule: ‘Will’ for decisions now; ‘going to’ for plans and intentions.
Examples: I will practise with a timer; I’m going to use quick slides; I will answer questions briefly
Common pitfall + fix: Using only one form for all futures — Choose the form by intention vs. decision.

Choose the best option: I ___ use one idea per slide.

Tip: ‘Going to’ for planned actions.

Fill with the best answer:
I ___ breathe and smile before I start.

Tip: ‘Will’ for a decision at the moment.

⚙️ Rules & Grammar — 4 Structures

2️⃣ Sequencers for structure

Rule: Use ‘first, next, then, finally’ to organise the talk.
Examples: First, greet the audience; Then present two use cases; Finally, invite questions
Common pitfall + fix: Jumping without signposting — Add clear sequencers.

Pick the best opener.

Tip: Start with ‘First’.

Fill with the best answer:
___, show one pain point.

Tip: Use ‘Then’ to move to the next step.

⚙️ Rules & Grammar — 4 Structures

3️⃣ Imperatives for advice

Rule: Use base verb to give clear advice.
Examples: Breathe before you start; Use one idea per slide; Stop reading full sentences
Common pitfall + fix: Softening so much that advice is unclear — Prefer direct imperatives.

Choose the best advice.

Tip: Imperative is clear and direct.

Fill with the best answer:
___ the slides under ten words each.

Tip: Imperative form.

⚙️ Rules & Grammar — 4 Structures

4️⃣ First conditional for plans

Rule: ‘If + present, will + base’ for real future conditions.
Examples: If I feel nervous, I will pause; If time is short, I will skip one slide; If a question is unclear, I will rephrase it
Common pitfall + fix: Using ‘would’ for real future — Use ‘will’ in the main clause.

Choose the correct sentence.

Tip: First conditional for real future.

Fill with the best answer:
If the timer rings, I ___ finish.

Tip: ‘Will’ in the main clause.

✍️ Vocabulary

  timebox

Meaning: to limit an activity with a fixed time.
Synonyms: limit, schedule, set a timer.
Chunk/Idiom: timebox your rehearsal.
Example: I timeboxed rehearsal to ten minutes..
Morphology: verb.
Self-practice: Say: Timebox the Q&A to three minutes..

  slide deck

Meaning: a set of presentation slides.
Synonyms: presentation, set of slides, deck.
Chunk/Idiom: a focused slide deck.
Example: The slide deck shows one idea per slide..
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Name two tools for slide decks..

  use case

Meaning: a practical example of how something is used.
Synonyms: application, scenario, example.
Chunk/Idiom: a clear AI use case.
Example: We presented three use cases..
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Give one AI use case in your job..

  pain point

Meaning: a specific problem that causes frustration.
Synonyms: issue, blocker, challenge.
Chunk/Idiom: a key pain point.
Example: We addressed one pain point..
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: State one pain point you face..

  stage fright

Meaning: nervousness before speaking in public.
Synonyms: anxiety, nerves, jitters.
Chunk/Idiom: reduce stage fright.
Example: Breathing helped reduce stage fright..
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Share a tip to manage stage fright..

  cue

Meaning: a signal to begin an action.
Synonyms: prompt, signal, hint.
Chunk/Idiom: a friendly opening cue.
Example: A question was a good cue to start..
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Write one cue for your intro..

☁️ Examples (+ audio)


First, set a clear goal for the talk.

Then timebox rehearsal to ten minutes.

Next, practise your opening question.

Finally, end with one action point.

✏️ Exercises

Grammar

Pick the best future form.

Tip: ‘Be going to’ + base verb.


Choose the best imperative.

Tip: Imperative is concise.


Fill with the best answer:
___, present one pain point.

Tip: Sequencer for structure.


Fill with the best answer:
If I feel nervous, I ___ pause.

Tip: First conditional form.


Vocabulary & Comprehension

What is a ‘use case’?

Tip: It shows how something is used.


‘Timebox’ means you…

Tip: Timeboxing sets a duration.


Fill with the best answer:
The slides form a ___ deck.

Tip: Collocation: slide deck.

Fill with the best answer:
Breathing reduces ___ fright.

Tip: Compound noun ‘stage fright’.

✅ Guided practice

Mini-dialogue:

A: What’s your plan for the talk?
B: First I’ll greet everyone, then share three use cases.
Finally I’ll invite one question.

Why this matters:
Structure reduces stage fright. Short slides keep attention high. Good openings build rapport quickly.

Verb & Adjective Pack:

  • to rehearse — Rehearse with a timer tonight.
  • concise — Give concise points per slide.
  • to engage — Engage the audience with a question.
  • visual — Use visual cues, not long text.

Try & compare:

Fill with the best answer: ___, share one clear use case.

Tip: Signal each step with a sequencer.

Self-correction: Fix the sentence: If I will feel nervous, I pause.

Tip: Present in ‘if’ clause; ‘will’ in main clause.

Practice aloud: Listen, repeat, then type the sentence.

Keep one idea per slide and speak slowly.

Tip: Pause after ‘slide’.

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