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Narrated Online PowerPoint Modules

Narrated Online PowerPoint Modules. Dr. Pete Seel Department of Journalism and Technical Communication CSU Professional Development Institute – January 7, 2010. Four Goals for Session. The rationale for adding narration to PPTs in online courses

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Narrated Online PowerPoint Modules

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  1. Narrated Online PowerPointModules Dr. Pete Seel Department of Journalism and Technical Communication CSU Professional Development Institute – January 7, 2010

  2. Four Goals for Session • The rationale for adding narration to PPTs in online courses • Why PPT lectures need to be redesigned for added narration • How to modify module design for narration • Quick demo on checking audio levels and adding narration

  3. Started at CSU in fall of 1996 Earned Ph.D. at Indiana University in 1995 M.A. is in educational technology Was media producer (video and photo) in healthcare field for ten years Online course is JTC 413 New Communication Technologies and Society Offered every fall since 2001 - just completed ninth online class Background

  4. Student Feedback • Suggest mid-term evaluations in all courses, especially those online • Make changes based on their feedback • Some comments from this past October: • “I absolutely appreciate the audio with the PowerPoint modules and I do like the tie-in with the required textbooks. I can't really imagine this online format without the audio PowerPoint.” -- Linda K.

  5. More… • “I love the powerpoints and the fact that you have added voice to them instead of simply giving slides to print off which has happened to me in several online courses.” -- Carrie K. • “I do greatly enjoy the powerpoint lectures. It is great being able to see an outline of topics while listening/learning about them. Extremely helpful.”-- Sean F. • “I agree with you about the voice in the PowerPoints; it does bring the classroom to my desk way out here on the East Coast!” -- Mary E.

  6. Two more… • “The modules are definitely helpful. I like how they come with audio, because if it were just the slides and I had to read them, I don't think I would get anything out of it. But the audio really, really helps!”-- Kathleen M. • “The online powerpoint presentations with the incorporated voice notes are very helpful. I can take my time listening and gathering notes and really soaking in the information.”– Allison S.

  7. The Rationale for Narration • Student retention greatly improves if they can read and hear course content at the same time • Typical for on-campus classes • Not so for most online courses • However, I just broke cardinal rule for PPT • Don’t use long blocks of text and… • God forbid – don’t read them verbatim

  8. Why PowerPoint? • One of the most maligned communication applications – why? • Terrible “execution” = death by PowerPoint • Too much text on screen • Limited illustrations • Key is editing text to bare minimum, then adding to it with narration • Think of it as a radio fireside chat – rather than Voice-of-God film narration

  9. The Editing Process • Review on-campus lecture PPTs • Trim as much text as possible – follow the 6 and 8 rule • Make sure that bullets appear one by one • Add images that require interpretation and/ or explanation (cartoons to add humor also) • Animate images in sync with related bullets • Run through the slides to think about what you’d like to add to them verbally • Save the file with a new name – add “NARRATED” to file name and put in folder

  10. What is this?

  11. Images: The digital divide….

  12. Humor: What digital divide?

  13. Radio Pioneers • Reginald Fessenden (1866 - 1932) transmitted first radio program - Christmas eve in 1906 • Lee De Forest (1873-1961) claimed credit for other’s inventions • Edwin Howard Armstrong (1890-1954) invented FM radio in 1933

  14. Radio via satellite How satellite radio works Satellites retransmit 150 channels to cars, homes, and offices Signals are up-linked from New York (XM Sirius) to satellites Source: XM Sirius

  15. Image Usage Tips • Leave the image up and talk about it • Recall that online students can pause the PPT and take notes on their printed hard copies

  16. Audio Set Up • Buy or borrow a set of computer head- phones with microphone • Can have two mini-plugs (mic in and audio out) or a USB plug • Cost -- $15 - $30 • Where: Best Buy, Target, Radio Shack, Ultimate, etc.

  17. Testing your audio levels • Plug in your headset – mic to mic, etc. • With PC under Control Panel: • Select Sounds and Audio Devices • Under properties select the Voice tab and go through Set-up Wizard to set audio levels • This is easier than it looks (2-3 minutes) • NOTE -- You’ll have a chance to check your levels again before recording narration

  18. Recording • Find a quiet place and time • For me Sunday evenings in my home office • Under Slide Show in PPT menu select Record Narration • Check recording levels one final time • Take a deep breath and hit OK record button • If you need to pause just click ESC button • Then pick up where you paused • When finished, click on save timing button to preserve slide transitions & check narration • Save As NARRATED version and keep in a separate folder from non-narrated versions

  19. In closing… • Final step is to upload the PPT file in RamCT as a learning module (just like any PPT file) • For online classes buy a headset and practice adding narration • Ask for midterm feedback from your students • Try your online PPTs (sans narration, of course) with your on-campus students • I bet they’ll like the added illustrations and spontaneity • For a good laugh in class show them this video by comedian Don McMillan

  20. End of narrated PPTs module Don’t forget a That’s all Folks slide

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