1 / 9

Pedagogies and PowerPoint

Pedagogies and PowerPoint. How would different followers construct a PowerPoint?. Active Index. A Behaviorist’s PPT Project A Constructivist’s PPT Project A Cognitivist’s PPT Project A Pragmatist’s PPT Project. Explore the capabilities of the program

manning
Download Presentation

Pedagogies and PowerPoint

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pedagogies and PowerPoint How would different followers construct a PowerPoint?

  2. Active Index • A Behaviorist’s PPT Project • A Constructivist’s PPT Project • A Cognitivist’s PPT Project • A Pragmatist’s PPT Project

  3. Explore the capabilities of the program • Review a variety of excellent examples • Set a standard for a finished PPT project based on achieved objectives, for example • Number of slides • Slide design expectations • Number of facts • Number of illustrations • Number of multimedia elements

  4. Create a rubric for grading the PPT, share with students • Display a prototype of an excellent PPT • Train students as needed • Allow workshop until deadline • Collect PPTs • Compare them against the prototype • 90-percent is an A, etc. • Did the behaviorist measure change?

  5. Explore the capabilities of the students • Review a variety of students’ best efforts, using either past PPTs or a simple-topic initial PPT assignment • Determine where each student is in their ability to manipulate PPT • Challenge students to best their personal best • Offer a range for achievement rather than a static finish line • Encourage creativity

  6. Create a rubric for grading the PPT, share with students • Display multiple prototypes of excellent PPTs • Train students as needed • Allow workshop until deadline • Collect PPTs • Compare them against the prototypes • Take into consideration individual progress • Assign ABCDF

  7. Put students into social groups • Select topics that interest them most • Spend a good deal of time on research • Assign a PPT that requires complex organization and navigation • Break the project into chapters • Break those into sub-chapters • Require sidebars • Hyperlinks guide the presentation in non-linear ways

  8. Presenters would be actively involved in the PPT: Much movement, props, audience involvements • Role playing • Cultural elements of the topic are addressed • Presentation ends with Q&A

  9. Find out what needs fixed around campus or in the town • Assign students to solve the problems found with a PowerPoint • Take the PowerPoint on the road and speak in public settings • Subject matter would mean a lot to the pragmatist • Grades would be based on effort and successful change

More Related