Category: series

Total 134 Posts

How To Present Well: Introduction

The self-aggrandizing title embarrasses me a little, but to the extent that it’s culturally acceptable to acknowledge our strengths alongside our weaknesses this is mine: I know how to present well. I’m learning lots. Constantly. Almost always by example. Better presentations than mine make my presentations better. This is an appropriate occasion to share what I’ve learned.

See, this has been a depressing summer so far and until recently, I was sure it was gonna end that way. I invested sixty- and seventy-hour weeks this last school year into my identity as Dan Meyer, Teacher. About the second week of pretending to be Dan Meyer, Video Editor, I became, in a very real sense, depressed. I felt flat, mopey, humorless. I wore out the snooze button.

But then somewhere in June I was given an hour to present anything to a group of pre-service math teachers in San Jose, CA. My life has been the second half of a Zoloft commercial since. I’ve invested a lot of time into this presentation not because it demanded it but because every minute I spent hacking away at it, I felt reconnected to the best part of my professional life.

This blog wasn’t around for the construction of my last presentation (everything before January was back-dated) so it seemed appropriate to blog the process of this one.

It’s called “Kicking out the Cliché.” I present it July 19th. It’ll be my best presentation to date. In six (more) daily installments, here’s why.

Bizarro Blog: [title redacted]

These digressions are becoming easier, more frequent. They induce less guilt than before. I feel decreasingly less like apologizing also because I find this stuff to be increasingly classroom vital.

If I taught any sort of English class, just for instance, I’d open my unit on [literary device redacted] with this commercial, one which kind of cut me off at the knees this evening by depicting a thoroughly unique existential crisis and by rendering [literary device again] perfectly, without breaking a sweat.

Which literary device am I thinking of? Which haven’t I thought of? Are you thinking what I’m thinking?

Related:

  1. The Complaint Factor. Jan Borelli finds teaching in an in-flight magazine.
  2. Everything Is Everything. Find teaching in your home.

Design for Educators: Greg Farr’s Dashboards

I wrote about Greg Farr‘s dashboards awhile back, his weekly airing out of the campus’ dirty laundry: non-attendance, discipline, drop-outs. “There are no secrets at Shannon,” Greg says. If I were ever to step into administration, implementing that kind of accountability would head my list of Things To Do Before I Ever Sat Down.

Here’s a sample dashboard, lifted from the school’s website

This particular accountability measure freaks me out, also, because it demands focused graphic design, which my longtime subscribers will recall is an incessant fixation of mine.

Unfortunately, Greg and his team have here what designers call a “low signal-to-noise ratio.” The information he’s trying to convey pulses faintly from the screen (low signal) while other design elements blare static around it (high noise).

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I Need Another Blog

Look I don’t know where to put this:

I realize we’re all slobbering ourselves over the new iPhone ad slate but the dy/dan Advertiser of the Year Award goes to DDB, London for their so-great-it-can’t-really-be-advertising spot for Volkswagen, Night Driving.

I’ve watched it no fewer than twenty times, five of those during class-hours, during our routine show-and-tell. I only teach four classes but one asked to see it twice and I was blown backwards by their exceptional taste as they praised it, totally unbidden and unprompted …

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Design for Educators: Your First Slide

Previously

  1. Introduction

Introduction

Your first slide is crucial. Cru. cial.

Your first slide establishes your presentation’s identity and even if you only fire up a projector three times a semester or present at only one conference, your presentation needs an identity. If you plan on presenting your lessons every day for a year (as has been my m.o.) this is quintuply important.

The reason is simply this: you don’t want your audience distracted by what your presentation looks like at the expense of what it’s about. No matter what my slides are about, they share a similar look.

This is priceless. In a matter of days, my students forget that the body text (Tahoma) looks different from problem information text (Gill Sans). They could tell you that the slide backgrounds are light blue but they forget that I use a gradient. I set problem answers to a darker shade of the background blue, but after a week, the look of the slide becomes so transparent, half the class would tell you it’s black. They never noticed the line breaks (always 10 points) or the reliable indentation (headers always 12% off the side; body text 3% more) or a dozen other elements I painstakingly built into the template with the express intention of rendering them totally, and completely, invisible.

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