How a typical college class PowerPoints ends. |
That however is not the stance of your typical grade school student. They aren't paying to be there. They're young enough that most of them don't understand the value, and those that do have yet to maturely catch up to the full impact of what an education means. To them, a PowerPoint pretty much means boring lecture, rapid note taking, and hand cramps.
In this project we set out to change all that. Using the Pennsylvania SAS website to pick a favorite standard to focus a mini-lesson around for a new type of PowerPoint project. That's right, ladies and gentlemen, an INTERACTIVE lesson using PowerPoint! (Someone is going to forward this to my college professors right?)
For my particular project, I chose to enlighten and challenge a classroom of 12th grade art history students to compare and contrast several famous works from four different art movements. The catch was for them to do this as self-exploration and independent study. How would you do this on PowerPoint you ask? Not anywhere near quickly, but relatively simply. After creating a main PowerPoint that outlined the expectations of the project I included links to several other PowerPoints that I created, one for each of the artwork pieces I had selected. Within these I included a downloadable worksheet each student was to print out and complete as they moved through the slides to explore specific website links and embedded videos that I wanted them to explore and read through.
Although I loved the idea that you can think out of the box on simple programs like PowerPoint, the very process was grueling and labor-intensive. I would much rather build a website on flash or a free server for my students to go through than try and fidget with attempting to settle a square peg in a round hole. It can certainly be useful and beneficial, but it'll take a bit of sandpaper and a handsaw before you get a product to go through.
It was however very gratifying to see and be able to present our final products to our small groups. The results and hard work showed, making it all the more rewarding despite the frustrations.
Source of the Day
Audience Response Systems - Welcome to my dream. Well, one of them. Have you ever seen a television show that has the audience take a poll and their results are automatically put up on the screen for all to see? Take that image, and apply your imagination to polling your students on that question you just asked about President Washington or the formation of a continent. How many students have to think about that answer before they move on? ALL of them. The video below is a promotion for a specific company selling this product, but it gives a VERY good idea to what you can do with it as an educator. I'm certain it will make you drool just like it did me.
Hope your mother is recovering quickly. I love the link to Bueller's shower picture...lol. I agree, the PPT were very time comsuming. Great Post!
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