USM THREE MINUTE THESIS COMPETITION
USM is organising the Three Minute Thesis Competition exclusively on virtual mode this year. 31 participants from various schools, who are on their second year and above of the PhD program at USM. Three Minute Thesis is a research communication competition. The exercise challenges PhD students to present a compelling oration on their thesis topic and its significance in just three minutes. 3MT develops academic, presentation, and research communication skills and supports the development of research students’ capacity to effectively explain their research in language appropriate to a non-specialist audience. Join us to support the participants! Lucky draw available for lucky audience, and be part to be the judge of People's Choice Award!

USM Virtual Three Minute Thesis (3M) Competition 2026

Gil Strang's Final 18.06 Linear Algebra Lecture

Think Fast, Talk Smart: Communication Techniques

LEADERSHIP LAB: The Craft of Writing Effectively

Forum Webinar: Bridging Theory and Practice:A Lecturer-Student Journey in Learning Experience Design

The Mitochondria Doctor: This Reverses Gray Hair, Makes You Feel Young Again & Fixes Disease!

RCSI & UCD (RUMC)- Exclusive webinar with Gyanberry

How to Speak

Sen. Whitehouse to uncover connections between Trump, Russia, and Epstein.

Why You Will Struggle To Study In Germany (and I don't)

How to Start Coding | Programming for Beginners | Learn Coding | Intellipaat

Improve your PhD writing with these 4 simple tips

How to increase your vocabulary: Live English Class
![Power Automate Tutorial ⚡ Beginner To Pro [Full Course]](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/KsgxDz-nY_I/hqdefault.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEjCNACELwBSFryq4qpAxUIARUAAAAAGAElAADIQj0AgKJDeAE=&rs=AOn4CLA_rx8lyBNlJugWNGyVLp7B46-c0w)
Power Automate Tutorial ⚡ Beginner To Pro [Full Course]

USM VIRTUAL THREE MINUTE THESIS (3MT) COMPETITION 2023

AI and the future of human learning | School's In Podcast

Why Purpose Is The Only Path To Fulfillment

Marketplace Forum - MBTS 15 NOV 2022

2014 Three Minute Thesis winning presentation by Emily Johnston

