Thesis defense is basically around the thesis, so the basis for deciding whether the defense is excellent is that your thesis must be good. If the paper is bought, made at will, or helped by others, then basically, an excellent defense has nothing to do with you. Although there is no chance to excel, the following content is enough for you to pass the defense smoothly.
Basic flow: 1. Paper explanation (some colleges will require PPT), 2. Free question and answer (generally three questions, basically most colleges will give you 10 minutes in advance, you can prepare the answers in advance below).
Time: about 20 minutes (including 8 minutes of explanation and free question and answer 12 minutes).
Generally speaking, on the basis of excellent papers, you need to do the following five steps:
Step 1: Familiarize yourself with the thesis.
Fifteen days before the defense, read the papers three times a day and seven times a day. Pay attention to reading and the process of reading.
Step 2: Make PPT and paper presentation 15 days in advance.
Do PPT well in advance. There are many tutorials on how to do PPT online. The basic requirement is no more than 20-30 sheets; PPT uses pictures and charts as much as possible, and text descriptions are as few as possible; Font requirements (bold title 44, bold text 32), template and font color comparison; You can download the PPT of Jobs, Kai-fu Lee and other big names. Now you can learn it well, and you will need it in your future work.
PPT, remember to put the text on it, no! The reason why we should advance 15 days is that we should be familiar with PPT in advance, control the time with a stopwatch, and correct body language and tone through audio or video recording. Remember, it is important to control time.
It is better to draw up a "defense draft" according to PPT. This draft is what you want to say in your defense, which is more colloquial.