1 / 13

Presentation Principles: Clearly Making Your Point

Presentation Principles: Clearly Making Your Point . Kevin M. Johnston MSU TA Programs kmj@msu.edu. Meaningful Learning: Your Ability to Provoke it. Purposes of this session: Inform you of basic presentation principles. Show you how you can take steps to improve your teaching now.

donatella
Télécharger la présentation

Presentation Principles: Clearly Making Your Point

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. Presentation Principles: Clearly Making Your Point Kevin M. Johnston MSU TA Programs kmj@msu.edu

  2. Meaningful Learning: Your Ability to Provoke it Purposes of this session: • Inform you of basic presentation principles. • Show you how you can take steps to improve your teaching now. • Link basic “teachnique” to larger, “Heart” of teaching issues . 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  3. Higher Education Today: Why is the “old” way not always the best way? • University teaching has begun to change considerably in the last 20 years (Or, has it?) : • Teaching and Learning Research • Teacher-centered to Student-centered classes • Need to demonstrate teaching effectiveness when applying for jobs 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  4. Principles of Powerful InstructionSteve Yelon, (1996) MSU Professor Emeritus • Meaningfulness, Prerequisites • Open Communication • Organized, Essential Ideas • Learning Aids • Novelty • Active Practice • Safe Spaces/Encouraging Places • Consistency • Original assumptions that are no longer valid 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  5. Professor Yelon’s Presentation Principles • Motivate • Review/Summarize • Explain • Demonstrate • Question • Share Feedback 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  6. The ART of Presenting art \ärt\ noun: skill acquired by experience, study, and observation • Set attainable goals – ORGANIZATION • Use the best format/materials to meet those goals - IMPLEMENTATION • Assess your progress regularly – SUMMARY and EVALUATION 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  7. Setting Presentational Goals • What’s your point? • Why is it important? • What should your students know? 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  8. Key Principles of Good Presenting • CLEARLY IDENTIFIED OBJECTIVES: Identify Key Points First! • SENSITIVITY and ADAPTABILITY: Show interest, listen, be open to change • PERIODIC SUMMARY: What have we just covered? Why was it important? 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  9. Presentation “Stages” • Introduction – including connections to prior material • Material Body – 15-minute segments • Periodic Summary – after each 15-minute segment • Conclusion – End with a bang, connect to upcoming materials 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  10. THREE KEYS to Good Presenting • Tell them what you’re going to do. • Remind them of what they’re doing while they’re doing it. • Tell them what they just did. 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  11. The “He(ART)t” of Presenting • Who are you as a mathematician, philosopher, scientist? • Who are you as a teacher? • Who are your students to you? 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  12. You Have Extraordinary Power • To Influence, Shape, Create, Motivate • To Connect, Assist, Share • To Learn (To teach yourself through DOING) 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

  13. Present Like You Mean It ! • Prepare and Practice – But Be Willing To Let Learning Happen • Share Your Passion – And Recognize the “Light bulb” When it Goes Off. • Enjoy the “Space” Good Presenting and Good Teaching Creates for You and Your Students. 2006 MSU TA Seminar on College Teaching

More Related