Category: presentation

Total 45 Posts

Presentations: Before/After

Two edubloggers, Damian Bariexca and Ben Wildeboer, posted classroom presentations within minutes of each other, both having updated them for student engagement and visual prettiness.

Wildeboer:

Bariexca:

[fixed names; thanks, h.]

The Principle Improvement

Their “before” slidedecks are dense with information. Their “before” slidedecks function as effective summaries of their lectures, which is a trait shared by absolutely every lousy slidedeck ever.

Their “after” slidedecks are image-heavy and information-light. They’re simply projecting images โ€“ no effects, no animation, no bullets โ€“ and, though we can debate the appropriateness of the images and the value they add to the lecture, no longer are Bariexca or Wildeboer trying to corral their entire talk within a 640×480 screen, which is death.

I Pity Them

But I pity these boys. I can predict their descent into madness ’cause I’m living it daily.

First, they’ll grow bored of punching keywords into FlickrCC. They’ll start searching out primary sources: satellite images, images from AP, Reuters, and Google searches.

Then they’ll start noticing extensions to their classroom content in the world around them and start snapping their own photos, creating their own Venn diagrams, building hyper-relevant discussions around those images.

Then these parasites will move to moving pictures, downloading clips from YouTube, from TV shows, building discussions around video.

Then, when they start bumping against that ceiling, they’ll make video content themselves and, from there, they’re properly screwed.

The Critical Question

But why use images at all?

What value does a submerged scuba diver add to Wildeboer’s discussion of the Earth’s crust? What value does a vampiric Hasidic Jew add to Damian’s discussion of anti-SemitismSeriously, wtf??

To some extent, their images merely season lectures which already tasted fine. Now that they’ve pushed past bullet points, it’s time for them find images which entertain and engage.

For My Part

Though I haven’t found the end of this rabbit-hole, I know I wouldn’t be half the teacher without this ability to put any image I want in front of my students.

Like today, discussing similar figures and scale-drawn maps, we hunted the Meyer family treasure across San Francisco’s financial district using some stitched-together Google Maps:

A student came in late and I caught him up by shuffling back through the slidedeck, getting him started, all with a wireless remote, all from his desk.

Afterwards I asked myself, how did this happen before?, and I couldn’t say.

Presentation for Teachers

Scott’s presentation on presentation is a stunner. I don’t know how he kept the reins around this one, flitting as he does from effective PowerPoint to effective handouts to effective delivery inside, I assume, seven hours.

As great as Garr Reynolds, Guy Kawasaki, and the usual suspects are, his PDF (with notes) is pitched straight at the classroom teacher, more precisely than even my own presentation series was.

Dude’s been working on it for months and deserves pageviews and plaudits aplenty. Link it along.

[Updated to fix a homonym.]

Presenting To The School Board

The Surrogate Son

Ten minutes in front of a school board, from my perspective as a Professional PresenterMeaning I got paid once., is gold. With just four people scattered throughout the audience and a board expecting chart- and data-heavy slides, I enjoyed low expectations.

The result was loose and informal (matching my jeans and coat ensemble) and very smiley. At this point in my life, looking boyish and harmless as I do, I’m running an extremely effective shtick which all but defies my categorization.

If I had to try, I’d call it “The Surrogate Son.” When I step in front of 40- and 50-year-olds, I am instantly adopted as their son. I start collecting these goofy and proud smiles, from the mothers, especially, who see in me their own sons, long gone from their eyes, mothers who hope their sons are somewhere warm, perhaps wearing a suit coat, perhaps doing something responsible like talking to a school board.

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No Closure

I can’t find a way to gracefully exit last week’s discussion of presentation. Eventually, I’ll upload a file to Slideshare which will (hopefully) embody the difference between a) slides that accompany your voice and b) slides that stand alone. Eventually, I’ll recreate the presentation in a vodcast. Eventually, I’ll recreate this entire design series in a vodcast.

Yikes.

I can’t remember the last time I was bored. Eighth grade, maybe. My to-do list brims at all times with 10% menial tasks (currently: vacuum, clean porch, wash car) and 90% creative stimuli (currently: a mograph slideshow, a 100+ item, intra-continental scavenger hunt [like this], any sentence beginning with “eventually” in the paragraph above).

It’d be easy to get depressed about all the fun to-do list entries I’m not getting around to except I remember real quickly that I’ve only forsaken them for other fun entries. Life seems to be a buffet line of excitement these past few years and my plate’s finite surface area doesn’t bug me so much. If this is adulthood, I’m in.

Anyway, ’til I get around to any of that, I need to fill in four gaps:

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OTF WHAT!

Dear TMAO and his Oakland Fellows,

Thanks for a great time today. Here’s that slide I promised.

  • TickleBooth for videos which don’t pertain to anything mathematical whatsoever, which are only barely justifiable as a post-break carrot to get ’em back in their seats.
  • Slate, their Explainer column, and the column we discussed today about the stolen nickels.
  • Safe bet that the blogger over at Indexed uses Venn diagrams as an affordable substitute for professional therapy.
  • Coudal is a Chicago graphic design house and their Fresh Signals feed drops an eclectic mix of links daily.
  • Snopes keeps my Fake or Legit feature stocked.
  • I raided Paul Grobman’s Vital Statistics awhile back for my miscellaneous opener problems.

If you guys have questions, comments, or good ideas I can steal be sure to use the contact form or post ’em here.