A nice rant against powerpoint
This:
http://www.greg-brooks.com/000005.html
and the link to a Wired article, say a lot about what I hate most about Powerpoint. I'm in the middle of responding to a request for a FIVE HOUR presentation, and fighting to get it made into a workshop instead. The attitude seems to be that you must use PP and you must have lots and lots and lots of slides.
http://www.greg-brooks.com/000005.html
and the link to a Wired article, say a lot about what I hate most about Powerpoint. I'm in the middle of responding to a request for a FIVE HOUR presentation, and fighting to get it made into a workshop instead. The attitude seems to be that you must use PP and you must have lots and lots and lots of slides.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Naturally it's useful to be able to illustrate lectures about the brain with diagrams of the brain. Or, indeed, anything that needs illustrating. I have to be honest and say that it also acts as a prompt for me, to remind me of content to include but also to preserve the structure of the lecture so that it makes most sense and I don't just ramble like a fool.
Hmm. It occurs to me that my favourite lectures are those where I have lots of room to ramble like a fool :)
no subject
no subject
I will say that even our seminars (= tutorials) have nearly entirely abandoned the assumption that students will do the reading, since when two people out of the six who turn up (from a class of 15) have done the reading and the other four haven't, it makes for such a crap learning experience all 'round (half an hour recapping the material, or reading it, in some cases; I am sufficiently pleased when students turn up to these things at all that I don't believe in sending them away) that it's not worth pursuing. I can't begin to think about what it would be like lecturing to students on the assumption that they knew a little about the area already.
I think of this as being partly due to today's conveyor-belt of young people into higher education, but also because we are a mediocre institution that does not attract many of the brightest/most motivated. The rest are accustomed, from school, to being spoonfed.
no subject
Then more recently (i.e last 6 months) had environment where most mtg rooms had projectors - therefore there was a tendency to use powerpoint. I did notice that my presentations tended to be - a title slide, some slides with diagrams that I didn't want to have draw again & again, and that was just about it...
My colleagues on the other hand were very adept at designing multipage presentations whereby they read out *all* the words on the slides...
I always felt this was very condescending to the audience as it was like saying - you lot can't read, so I'm going to read it for you....