Showing posts with label Presentation Strategies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Presentation Strategies. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Storytelling for the YouTube Generation: The remixed culture

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During the technology update portion for our district's opening day, I spoke with staff about viewing YouTube as a genre.  This genre is viral short-form film and is embedded in the lives of each and everyone one of our YouTube generation students.  Here are a few strategies and examples as discussed during the presentation that we didn't have time to go in depth with.  
When giving students "creative briefs" like this, remember that they don't necessarily need "training" on how to do this. Try to make experiences like this as organic as possible and avoid the traditional "how-to" step by step list of directions for them.  In the end, remember you are grading them on CONTENT - not on their video skills. It's how they communicate what they know that matters. 
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Active participation in literary experience enhances the development of comprehension, oral language, and sense of story structure." 
- LM Morrow
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Stop-motion via Vine (for smart phone or tablet)

Google Doc stories via Google Storybuilder:
Story builder with math word problem example:

Swede Videos (example from Star Wars remixed and remade)


1-minute, 1-take videos (sum up anything - i.e. sum up all the rules of football in 1 minutes or sum up a story)
1 minute 1 take video summing up Forrest Gump movie

Remixed Music for Parody videos (aka any song "goat-edition") :)
 


Paper-slide video
How-to guide for creating the paper-slide video


Newsletter 2.0
Get the kids involved! 
Example via a Principal along with students sharing weekly updates from school.


Nonfiction video voice-overs (sum up anything)
ex: Planet Earth - narrated by kids

Directions on creating a video like the one above - Taking nonfiction video and having students remake it (i.e.: strip out voice and have the students read it)

  • Save/download media from DiscoveryEd or YouYube, etc.
    • get something that’s like 1 minute 14 seconds (short)
  • You or the students import the video into the online video editor website WeVideo
    • when ready to do a voice over...
      • put volume down for the main video on WeVideo screen (not on device)
      • record your own video with webcam directly on WeVideo
      • drag it into the timeline editor and click “edit”
        • drag the scroll bar to the left to make your own video small and drop into the corner of the screen



Doing this or K-2 is so possible! Just find the clips ahead of time, cut them down to the length you'd like on WeVideo or MovieMaker and have the kids do the self-webcam video reading portion.
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Friday, January 10, 2014

Communicating Visually with ThingLink and Lucidchart

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I had a great time yesterday chatting with two teachers, Melissa Barron and Leslie Loboda, and we were mustering around ideas on better tools for annotating texts and images online. With Diigo already something many teachers and students are accustomed to (see my previous post on Diigo here), we talked instead about ThingLink and LucidChart for visual communication tools. In addition, due to the fact that we decided not to renew our district subscription to Glogster for this year, these are great free tools that can supplement similar experiences for our students.

ThingLink allows users to add media-rich content and text to image files. It's somewhat like Facebook tagged-images meets storytelling and annotating as images come alive with music, text, video, images, hyperlinks, etc. It is extremely intuitive to use. Students can create and explore advertisements, time periods, vocabulary, authors and other topics by creating media bundles on one collective image. Here is a brief intro to ThingLink as well as 26+ strategies on how to use it in the classroom.
NoteIf you're a teacher or student, you can upgrade your account to Education; it’s FREE. If a student is under the age of 13, a teacher, parent or legal guardian must provide consent for the child to use ThingLink.


A Brief Look at ThingLink


26+ Ways to use ThingLink (by Donna Baumbach)



Here's a sample




Lucidcharts is a common tool that Melissa uses with her 7th and 8th grade science classes as a shareable and interactive brainstorming, annotating, diagramming/flowchart tool.  Lucidcharts integrates instantly with Google Drive, and for students and teachers that are already accustomed to the sharing/editing aspect that goes on within Google Drive, using Lucidcharts will seem very familiar.  Simply sign up for a free account with your Google (D68 teachers - your email is a Gmail account) and then head on over to the Chrome Web Store and download the Chrome App, also free.  Once you have an account, be sure to do the free K-12 education upgrade!

Link: 10 ways to use Lucidcharts in the classroom

A Brief Look at Lucidcharts integration with Google (disregard the portion on Visio docs)



Here's a sample of a Lucidchart that D68 new teachers worked on together
mind mapping software
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Thursday, December 19, 2013

Presentation Formats that Light Up 21st Century Thinkers

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With dozens upon dozens of presentation tools and strategies out there, here are a few tips along with some "hidden gems" that allow students to gain control of their learning experience and coast students into avoiding dull, text-rich presentations.

Letting go of control & honoring choice
For a unit 2 classroom assessment, 8th grade language arts teacher Di Ander found the learning outcomes for her students to be incredibly successful after giving students the reigns to control their learning experience.  The students are given an assessment known as a Real World Experience in which they had to persuade others to support their Not for Profit organization financially. All kids received 5,000 fake dollars to donate to a charity of their choice and present their ideas to their peers. The students were all about integrating technology to have a more powerful 1-2 minute presentation and were very curious of their options on what they could use.

The current teaching and learning shift we are experiencing that places the role of the student  at the center of the learning experience is reshaping relationships between teachers and students.  Something that we all accept as a known fact is that the person who does the work does the learning.  Today's students need to be given an opportunity that takes their own work a step further.  True ownership in learning goes beyond just "doing the work".  Let your students do more learning by providing them with the tools and steps they need to take to be successful, but find a way to honor their choice at the same time.  Choice in note-taking strategy.  Choice in collaboration/communication outlet. Choice in presentation tool. 

"Students need to become contributors to their work.  Shift from the teacher at the center of curriculum, designing tests, to the network of children who are helping one another learn" (Alan November). 
Set your vision, set your goals and parameters, give the students a learning target, and allow them the opportunity to discover how they can accomplish it. Allow students to seek out their own learning.
Di Ander's class at work.


Communicating Effectively: Less is more

Although the style/tool used for student presentations were open to allow for student choice, the vision that Di had in place for the format of presenting was clear.  The students were to follow Pechu Kucha 20x20 - a "simple presentation format where you show 20 images, each for 20 seconds. The images advance automatically and you talk along to the images" (http://www.pechakucha.org/), or in Di's students' case, 10 images for 20 seconds a piece.  Popular tech-tool students chose for their outlet of accomplishing this included Google Presentation, Prezi, and the newly launched (but still in Beta format) Haiku Deck.

Even though full-class presentations for the most part are becoming less mandatory after an inquiry project than before, it all still depends on what you want students to get out of their learning experience.  In the case of Di's class, not only were they set to master a set of skills/specific standards, they also were coaching one another on how to present information in an effective and engaging matter.  In a sense, they needed to learn how to present to get audience members to care - to see why something they care about matters.


There's a great article called the Latest Annoying PowerPoint Survey Results that details how presentations become annoying, uneffective, and pretty much and overall bore for audience members.  Here's a few take-away items they found:



  • The speaker read the slides to us
  • Text so small I couldn't read it
  • Full sentences instead of bullet points
  • Overly complex diagrams
  • Poor color choice
  • No clear purpose
  • No flow of ideas
Catherine Carr of Haiku Deck created the following presentation on how PowerPoints go bad


I implore you all to check out Haiku Deck.  It'll change your world AND 
forever change the way you present information!



Share the awesome learning
If you're doing some awesome learning and you're not sharing, it's selfish. Share your #eduwins with fellow educators in your building or share the wins on social media. Increase traffic to student-centered posts on Twitter by adding #comment4kids.  Either way, share the successes (and share failures... you'd be so surprised to see the amount of incredible educator-strangers that will come to your rescue on Twitter if you ask for help!). Imagine the learning experience for the student who not only just presented on a topic they were passionate about in a way that makes sense for them, but then add on that educators can learn from the experiences of that student online.

Here's an example of Di sharing her eduwins with the outside world.  Note that the student chose to present without notecards and instead used his cell phone as his springboard for notes!



Happy learning!

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