PowerPoint presentation Medical Teachers

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PowerPoint presentation Medical Teachers

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Power Point In

Medical Teaching Dr.T.V.Rao MD

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 1

History of Power Point

• Microsoft Office PowerPoint was originally developed by Bob Gaskins and software developer Dennis Austin under the name Presenter for Forethought. Microsoft Corporation purchased Forethought and its PowerPoint software product for $14 million on July 31, 1987. In 1990 the first Windows versions were produced for Windows 3.0. Since 1990, PowerPoint has been included in Microsoft Office suite of applications -- except for the Basic Editions of the suite.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 2

PowerPoint

Presentations:

should create

Design, Content & Delivery

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 3

Important part in Power

Point is Content • The most important part of any

presentation is the content, not

the graphical appeal. That is

why you should develop your

presentation with the content

first, before deciding on the

look (colours, graphics, etc.)

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 4

Learn the Basics with interaction

with other Friends who are familiar

• For the presentation, just make changes to the default slides that PowerPoint gave us with the AutoContent Wizard. In the beginning learn to be familiar with

• How to change the titles of slides

• How to change fonts and font sizes

• How to add a bulleted list

• How to delete slides

• How to add a new slide

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 5

Microsoft Power Point

Soft Ware makes

matters simple

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Dr.T.V.Rao MD 7

Power Point view on Screen

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 8

Menu Bar • Menu Bar

As well as the standard

menu option for things

like opening files, saving

your work, creating new

presentations, cut, copy

and paste, this is where

all the PowerPoint tools

can be found. You'll meet

lots of these menu

options as we go along.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 9

Outlines

• Outlines

This shows you an Outline of your presentation. The headings next to the numbers are taken from the title of a particular slide. Change the title and you change the heading in the Outline view. There's also a bullet list of other text on your slide. The Outline is so that you can quickly see what an individual slide is all about.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 10

Create you own Notes in the bottom

Need not go to Text Books often

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A Right click on any indicated

will change the face of

presentation

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Openoffice.org Impress is free

soft ware when you work with

free operating systems

Can be downloaded from net

Proving to be highly efficient

system

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Dr.T.V.Rao MD 14

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 15

CREATING BETTER

POWER POINT

PRESENTATIONS Dr.T.V.Rao MD 16

… A good presentation needs

• Acceptable Design

• Engaging Content

•Positive Delivery

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YOUR AUDIENCE IS ALIVE… DO NOT BORE THEM !

DO NOT BLEND YOURSELF INTO THE MESSAGE!

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Audience are Live Make your

presentation acceptable

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SYMBOLS ARE COMPELLING!

DATA IS NOT!

USE VISUAL TOOLS!

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NOT THIS! As is see you in Next Slide

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Dr.T.V.Rao MD 22

Make Matters Easy

• One Idea at a

Time

Makes the

learning

easy

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Complex Pictures creates

confusion

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USE CAPTIVATING IMAGES…

NO CLIP ART OR ARROWS!

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Practice, Practice, Practice…

PRACTICE!

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PRESENT YOUR TOPIC WITH…

PASSION!

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REMEMBER THE COGNATIVE LOAD THEORY…

???

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Create an Impact with

Pictures

Uncommon pictures do

have an impact

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Such pictures cannot be

replaced by any media

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Cannot be shown better than this

by any teaching Medium

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Better for Microteaching

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To Understand Better

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A Student is new to your Ideas

Too many approaches yield

Negative results

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Dr.T.V.Rao MD 35

Designing Effective

PowerPoint Presentation

Simple Consistent

Clear

Big Progressive

Summary

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Make it Big (Text) • This is Arial 12

• This is Arial 18

• This is Arial 24

• This is Arial 32

• This is Arial 36

• This is Arial 44

• Make the right font

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Make it Big (Text)

• This is Arial 12

• This is Arial 18

• This is Arial 24

• This is Arial 32

• This is Arial 36

–This is Arial 44

• Looks bold and impressive

Too Small

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 38

Make It Big (How to Estimate)

• Look at it from 2 metres away 2 m

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Animations take away the

Audience from you – Blank the

Study

• Just press the B key on the keyboard

and the image is replaced with a

black image. Press the B key again

and the image is restored. If you want

to use a white image instead of a

black image, press the W key each

time. Dr.T.V.Rao MD 40

Make matters Simple

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 41

Make it Simple

Do not complicate • Keep It Simple (Text)

• Too many colours

• Too Many Fonts and Styles

• The 6 x 7 rule

–No more than 6 lines per slide

–No more than 7 words per line

– Font size 36 accommodate 6 – 7 lines

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 42

Keep It Simple (Text)

Instructional Technology: A complex integrated process involving people, procedures, ideas, devices, and organization, for analyzing problems and devising, implementing, evaluating, and managing solutions to those problems in situations in which learning is purposive and controlled (HMRS 5th ed.)

Too detailed !

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 43

Keep It Simple (Text)

A process

involving people, procedures & tools

for solutions

to problems in learning

Instructional Technology:

Much Simpler

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 44

Too much writing

• Common Problem:

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 45

& writing Too small • It was one of those summery days when the air is heavy

and warm and nobody wants to do very much. Jonathan and Robbit were resting on top of one of Moley's hummocks, relaxing and watching the rest of the world go by. Jonathan could feel the sun's warmth through his shell and it was making him feel comfortable and drowsy. He wriggled contentedly. Last night, before he'd gone to bed, Jonathan had taken off his shell and given it a special polish, and this morning it gleamed in the sunlight. Beside him on the soft warm molehill, Robbit lay on his back, his paws behind his head, gazing up at the clear blue sky, thinking about things in his own rabbity way.

• "Why do nettles have stings?" He asked suddenly

• Jonathan had just begun to doze off, and woke with a start

• "Why do nettles have what?" He asked, not quite awake.

• "Stings," Robbit scratched one of his ears in a comfortable, absent-minded sort of way.

• Jonathan pondered, his head tilted to one side as he thought.

• "I suppose," He said eventually, "They have stings so nobody will eat them."

• "That's silly," Said Robbit, "Nobody'd want to eat a rotten old nettle, anyway: they're all tough and stringy."

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 46

Impressing audience with

Your technological Ideas is

Hazardous

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Media Rich Distorts

Ideas

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You Can write pictures while

teaching

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Dr.T.V.Rao MD 50

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 51

Draw on the screen during

a presentation

• Press the Ctrl-P key combination

to display a pen on the screen.

Then, using the left mouse button,

draw on the slide as you wish. To

erase what you have drawn,

press the E key. To hide pen,

press the A key or the Ctrl-H key

combination. Dr.T.V.Rao MD 52

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 53

Explain complex

theory with diagrams

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 54

Keep It Simple (Transition)

• This transition is annoying, not enhancing

• "Appear" and "Disappear" are better

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 55

Keep Simple Animations

Animation distract the students away

from Teacher

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 56

• Serif fonts are difficult to read on screen

• Sanserif fonts are clearer

• Italics are difficult to read on screen

• Normal or bold fonts are clearer

• Underlines may signify hyperlinks

• Instead, use colours to emphasise

Make It Clear (Fonts)

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 57

Graphs - Good

Items Sold in First Quarter of 2002

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

January February March April

Blue Balls

Red Balls

Graphs - Bad

20.4

27.4

90

20.4

30.6

38.6

34.631.6

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

January February March April

Blue Balls

Red Balls

Common Mistake:

• People tend to put every word they are going to say on their PowerPoint slides. Although this eliminates the need to memorise your talk, ultimately this makes your slides crowded, wordy, and boring. You will lose your audience's attention before you even reach the bottom of your.... SLIDE Dr.T.V.Rao MD 60

Background – Bad

Avoid backgrounds that are distracting or

difficult to read from

Always be consistent with the background

that you use

Pros of Power Point

Teaching

• PowerPoint is easy for

Teachers to update,

saving them time and

energy. It's neat and

clean, and it allows for

"portability" of materials. Dr.T.V.Rao MD 62

Updating and Sharing

• Teachers can take slides

from one lecture, update

them, include them in

another lecture,

Share them with

colleagues or students ?

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 63

Pros ……

• It also provides a platform

for incorporating a variety of

different kinds of multi-

media file-types: images,

video, audio, and

animations.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 64

Cons in power point

Teaching • There are also drawbacks to

using PowerPoint as a teaching

tool. PowerPoint, when used

incorrectly, can encourage

student (and teacher) passivity by

discouraging interaction between

them.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 65

Cons … • Teachers often overload slides

with information, forcing them to

move through the material too

quickly while overwhelming

students with details. This can

sometimes discourage students

and lead them to stop listening to

the lecture altogether Dr.T.V.Rao MD 66

We can create Power

points on Mobiles / Tablets

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In Summary

• Big

• Simple

• Clear

• Progressive

• Consistent

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Some Final Words

• Communication is the key

• Text to support the communication

• Pictures to simplify complex concepts

• Animations for complex relationships

• Visuals to support, not to distract

• Sounds only when absolutely

necessary

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Final Tip

•W for White,

B for Black.

•Black and white is

the Best

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Colors are not really Colorful

• For teaching to Bigger masses avoid colored fonts

• The spectrum of colors is wide

• The Black and White is accepted by every human psychology

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Copying from Internet

• Several PowerPoint documents are

available,

• Donot download from unfamiliar Internet

sites, carries spyware,malware

• If you donot have Antiviral programme

update at the earliest

• Many documents may not suit you major

needs

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 72

Hyperlinks are Useful

and Harmful • In 1990 the first Windows versions were

produced for Windows 3.0. Since 1990,

PowerPoint has been included in Microsoft

Office suite of applications -- except for the

Basic Editions of the suite.

• The blue colored letters copied

from Internet carries hyperlinks

if connected to Internet

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 73

Never Edit Your Teaching

Text Without Spell Check

• Spell check is the important

component of any text

presentation

• Many spelling mistakes

weaken your strengths in

teaching

• Still we make ? Dr.T.V.Rao MD 74

Your articles are watched

Globally If Uploaded

• Several search engines crawl on your site

• www.googlebot.com

• You are watched

• Think twice before putting you material

on the Internet.

• If it contains information useful to others,

you can have several friends in the

Scientific circle around the Globe

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 75

Do not make Teaching Media

Taller than you

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Your projector or computer may

fail any TIME

Put up a Brave Face

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Ride on New Technologies To cope up with

changing trends in Education

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Truth about PowerPoint

Presentations PowerPoint presentations cannot

make good teachers

Good teachers can make better

PowerPoint presentation

IN spite of all technologies no

SUBSTITUE to a Competent and

Dedicated Teacher

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 79

Conclusion

Use an effective and strong closing

Your audience is likely to remember

your last words

Use a conclusion slide to:

Summarize the main points of your

presentation

Suggest future avenues of research, and

we serve our Patients

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 81

Created for Better

Understanding on Power

Point Presentations

Email

doctortvrao@gmail.com

Dr.T.V.Rao MD 82

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