74 Articles match "Content","Maine"

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Thursday, March 4, 2010
8220;One of the main contributors to student boredom is the use of PowerPoint. Tags: Content Design principles Resource boredom education researc I just found a great article by Sandi Mann in The Guardian, called, “ Why do 60% of students find their lectures boring? (Dr. Dr. Sandi Mann
 
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
If you have 20 minutes, divide that up between your opening, your closing, your body (say, three main points) and Q & A. It's not bad to be verbose; it can actually be useful in terms of having lots of content. I have a client who's verbose. It's the first thing he told me when I asked him about his challenges with public speaking. But
 
Sunday, February 21, 2010
My observer said he loved how I was able to weave so many facts into the Q&A--it made me look knowledgeable, but also reached audience members right at the moment where they were learning something new and needed to know more about the next step to take. For many presenters, the goal is to show what they know, and they choose to do that in their "main" speech or presentation. Join our thriving community to get extra content, early input into my blog posts, and to share your questions, photos and video. New! Sign up for The Eloquent Woman's free monthly newsletter, Step
 

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When listening to a presentation, the main task is thinking. Change your style of delivery according to the content. Tags: Content attention Audience storie Reference: Hartley J and Davies I “Note taking: A critical review” Programmed Learning and Educational technology, 1978,15, 207-224 cited by John Medina in Brain Rules Keeping audience attention is more important and more difficult than grabbing audience attention .
Ask yourself – what’s the main thing I want to tell the audience about making the workplace safer? Tags: Content Key Messag A key message is the number one thing you want your audience to remember or do as a result of your presentation. Some experts call it “the big idea”, the core of your presentation or the proposition .
First, organizing the content of the presentation and second, creating slides to go with it. Organize the content Slides containing mainly text. It’s probably the main reason most presentations go on too long. In a perfect world, every new presentation would be prepared from scratch, tailored exactly to the specific audience. But in reality, you sometimes have to cobble together a “new presentation” from pre-existing material.
For example, when I’m explaining the process for designing a presentation , I have five main points: Tags: Content presentation planning presentation preparation rule of three stories three-part structur In my Presentation Planning Guide I suggest that you use a thee-part structure for your presentation. They work for novels and movies, and for presentations too.
Al Gore became an engaging presenter with the aid of simple, high-impact visuals that helped him tell the story and give evidence supporting his content. • Using a prepared script from the lectern (no slides) Isabel Allende: Tales of passion . Taylor uses some slides and one prop (an actual human brain), but mainly she lets her emotions out and tells her story in an honest, sincere way. TED has earned a lot of attention over the years for many reasons, including the nature and quality of its short-form conference presentations. All presenters lucky enough
Organize Your Main Points Pull out the three-to-five main points and build your presentation around them . But you will be much better off clustering them into groups of three or five and labeling them sub-points instead of main points so that your audience doesn’t get overwhelmed.   Tags: Technical Presentations content technical demos technical professional I’ve been working with a group of technical professionals this week and am running into a familiar techie issue. My technical guys love monologue.
Below I summarize some of his main points at a glance. (1) Getting Started • Choose a topic for which you have great passion. Felix uses note cards and paper clips to capture and organize his ideas. • Remember: "it's about removing, not adding, content" in this phase. • "Just because your slides are in sequence, it doesn't mean they have to be linear." (2) Slide design tips • Use large images (he gives links to his favorite image websites) . • Use as little text as possible. • "The slide should be an addition to, not a summary of, your ideas and concepts."
The presentation is good in terms of content and delivery; Buettner is an engaging figure. There's got to be a reason to get out of bed every day. Eat Wisely (4) Drink a little (wine) everyday. (5) Eat mainly plant-based foods. Happy New Year, everyone. I hope 2010 is a healthy and meaningful one for
Crafting a set of tweets for the main points of your presentation and then tweeting them as you make those points in your live presentation is a great way to be part of the Twitter conversation. Note: it does have a free version which offers auto-filtering – this means that it automatically filters out tweets with “profane” content). Presenting while people are tweeting is challenging – but also adds a new dimension to the presentation experience for your audience. Gradually tools are being developed to make it easier for you as the presenter to manage the backchannel.
We talk a lot about organizing our content, main points, opening and closing, but we rarely talk about how to get from one segment to the next. Repeat and recap the main point you just covered. How do you handle the spaces in between your points, stories, examples, and exercises? These are your transitions .