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Developing a Computer Therapy Program in PowerPoint

Learn how to create a powerful computer therapy program using PowerPoint for Communication Disorders. This presentation provides step-by-step instructions and examples.

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Developing a Computer Therapy Program in PowerPoint

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  1. THE POINT OF POWER THERAPYDeveloping a Computer Therapy Program in POWER POINT(1997-2003 PPT) Presented in Power Point with Dr. Hall (Click anywhere to go on…) Viewer discretion advised

  2. We are going to use this POWER POINT presentation to teach you how do develop a computer program, using Power Point, for therapy in Communication Disorders. • I understand the Pointpart but what does the Powder do? ER not D ER It’s POW Celia! Its POWER and it means you can create, almost like magic, a powerful computer lesson with a minimum of effort and time. Please click on the RED arrow to proceed

  3. Your assignment for this Module is to develop, using the “magic” of POWER POINT, a simple 3 Slide Therapy lesson (you can do more if you wish) which teaches something, is interactive and has feedback. Hopefully it will also be interesting to the student, and easy and even fun to develop, so please, don’t have a bad feeling about this, at least yet. Click the cursor on the red arrow to see an example…

  4. Drawing Inferences #1 This couple is about to begin… • Eating • Dancing • Fighting

  5. Sorry, you MISSED that one! Please Click the arrow to go back and try again.

  6. Sorry, you MISSED that one! Please Click the arrow to go back and try again.

  7. You scored a hit! Good Job!

  8. I used animated GIF’s for my pictures which I drew myself, but any still picture (GIF or JPEG) etc. would do. Power Point comes with a small library of pictures and sounds which can be Inserted into a lesson; or you can insert or copy and paste from other programs (some of the sounds, for example, that I used came originally from Hyperstudio); and then again, there is a virtual endless sea of pictures and sounds you can copy off the Web, or if you have access to Boardmaker, you have it made. • You can, of course, also insert simple movie clips instead of a GIF picture into your lesson. You can get these off the Web too, or if you have nothing else to do and have a video camera, you can cheaply make them yourself. Here is a video of me, for example, in my younger days (55ish give or take 5) giving a CD student a lesson in Self-Defense…To see this video, click on the Camera below, but be warned that some of the scenes may be graphic and should not be seen by anyone under 60 without adult supervision; and please remember… • Don’t try this in the home !!!

  9. (Click on the picture to repeat, or the red button if you have seen enough!)

  10. Oh well, that is why I am a Speech Pathologist and not a Karate Instructor! Actually we used this quicktime movie in a lesson to demonstrate the familial phrase, “He asked for it.” • So how do we start? The first thing we must have is a Power Point Program as found in Microsoft Office. On my PC Desktop, the Power Point Icon looks something like this… • When we click on the Icon, we may get a screen that looks something like what follows on the next slide…(so for now click on the red button to see that).

  11. Please notice the large slide in the center. This is where we will develop our lesson. To the left is a space for a column of small slides (right now there is only one) that will show the order of the slides as they are made. We can use this column to maneuver between the slides as they increase in number, by clicking on the slide we want..

  12. If we hold down the “Ctrl” key while we hit the “M” key we will get a new slide, and if we do it again, we will have the third slide we need for this project. • (Please note in passing, that at the top of the left column of slides, there are three choices. The “X” on the right removes the column entirely. To get it back we can go to the View pull down Menu and click on the first Option—”Normal”)

  13. To get back to the first slide, we can click on the first slide in the left hand column. Now we can start to develop our lesson. But what will that lesson be? It could be about Confrontation Naming (i.e., naming the pictures), or Categorization, or Spelling or Grammar such as prepositional phrases, or anything. For this example, lets use Categorization as the central goal of the therapy lesson. For example, we could ask the question, “Which one doesn’t belong?” • Looking at the Center Slide, we can see that there are two Text Boxes outlined on the slide. One says “Click to add Title” and the other says “Click to add text.” We may wish to move, remove and/or modify them so we have room for our pictures. We can move a text box by moving the cursor towards the edge until it turns into a small cross. Then with the cross showing we hold down the left button on the mouse and drag the box to the new location. Or if we hit the delete key, the text box will be wiped out. • To make the box thinner we put the cursor on one of the small circles on the edge or corners of the box until it turns into an two wayarrow. Then with the left button down on the mouse we move the edge to the desired size.

  14. To add a picture, we go to the “Insert”Pull Down menu and click on the “Picture” option. A new menu pops up with more choices. We could click on the “From File” optionif we had pictures we had drawn or copied off the Web and saved somewhere on our computer; or we can use the “Clip Art” option if we want to use the Power Point’s library. • When we select “Clip Art” we will get a Clip Art Search Engine to the right of the screen (visible on the next slide). There will be two pull down menus called “Selected collections” and “Media File Types.” Under the first, I would select “Office Collections” and from the second I would select “AllMedia File Types.” Then in the “Search for:” box, we can type in the name of the picture we want, like “CAT.”

  15. Having typed in the word “Cat” we click on the “GO” button and whatever pictures the library contains will appear below. If we find one we wish to use, we place thecursor over the picture. If we then click on it, the picture will be inserted into our lesson slide. • But you may also have noticed that a bar appears to the right of the picture. If we click on that bar a pull down menu appears with a number of other options. • We can resize the picture on our slide by placing the cursor in one of the small circles and when the two way arrow appears holding down the left button on the mouse and dragging it to the desired size. We can also move the picture by placing the curser over the picture so the cross appears, and then while holding down the left mouse button we drag the picture to the desired spot.

  16. Using the same techniques, we can get two more pictures for our lesson slide from the library or other sources. They could be a boat and a car. Hence, the question posed on slide #1 might be , “Which picture does not belong?”

  17. The next thing we might wish to do is set up page (slide) 2 as a negative response page, and page 3 as a positive response page. • For the negative response page we might wish to have some kind of picture and a written response, like, “Sorry, wrong picture. Please try again.” • We can use the Power Point Clip Art Library, as before, and type in the word “Sad.” Clicking on the picture will insert it into our slide.

  18. The third slide could be the Positive Reinforcement slide. Among other things, we can insert a happy type of picture on this card using as we did before the Power Point Library.

  19. Now that we have our three slides, our lesson strategy and our pictures, we need to introduce some interactivity to the lesson. • We can start with the first Slide again in which the student must make a choice among three pictures, one of which does NOT belong. Hence, there are two Wrong Pictures and one Right Picture. Lets start with the wrong option. We need to create a button which will take the student to the Negative Reinforcement Page if the wrong picture is selected. • One way to make an interactive button is to click on the Text Box or the Picture that we would like to make interactive. When we do that, we will see the little circles appear in the edges of the picture or text box. Then we go to the pull down menu at the top of the screen that says “Slide Show” and move the cursor down the list until we highlight “Action Settings.” You can see all this on our next slide.

  20. When we click on the “Action Settings” option, an Action Settings Pop up window will appear (as shown in our next slide).

  21. When we click on the “Hyper Link to” radial button,” a pull down menu appears giving us a choice of which card the lesson should move to next. There is also a Play Sound pull down menu which will give us some choices of sounds. When we click “OK” we are finished. • Here there are a number of options. We can select an action to occur on a Mouse Click (or when the mouse moves over the area).

  22. Hence, for the “Sailboat” picture, if the student clicks on that picture, the lesson will go to the next slide, which happens to be the Negative Reinforcement Slide. • We can repeat this procedure with the “Airplane” picture so that if the student clicks on that picture, the lesson will also move to the Negative Reinforcement Slide. • Once the student has arrived on the Negative Reinforcement Slide, it will be necessary to have a button available so the student can return to the Question Slideto try again. • This time, rather than making a Picture or a Textbox interactive, we will insert a separate button for this purpose. We can do this by going to the “Slide Show” pull down menu, as before, but this time selecting the “Action Buttons” option. When we do this another popup menu will appear with a list of button types to chose from.

  23. When we click on our choice for a button, nothing seems to happen, except the cursor will appear in the form of a cross (-|-). We place the cross where we want the button to be on our slide, and holding down the left button on the mouse drag the cursor. A square will appear which we will make the size of the button we are creating. • When we release the left button on the mouse, the same “Action Settings” menu we saw before will appear. After we have made our selections and clicked on “OK,” the finished button will appear on our slide.

  24. At this point I am pleased to say that we have made a Clean Sweep of things. We have looked at enough of the Power Point tools to complete the three slide project for this Module. We have developed a lesson that teaches something, is interactive, andprovides feedback. Lets see how it works…

  25. Categorizing Lesson: Question #1 Which picture does not belong?

  26. Sorry, wrong picture!Please try again. Please Click here to return

  27. YES, YES, YES, YOU TAKE THE CAKE! • That was CORRECT.

  28. There are many more capabilities in Power Point, but we need only discuss a few more odds and ends to satisfactorily complete our class Project. For example, you remember on Slide #1 of this lesson, how we can click anywhere on the slide to move on to the next slide? This strategy does not work well, however, when we want to use buttons to move the lesson. Hence, we must disable the “click anywhere” option. This can be done under the Slide Show pull down menu through the Slide Transition option.

  29. When we click on the Slide Transition Option, a menu appears to the right of the screen. Of primary importance is the BOX under the “Advance slide” heading in front of the “On mouse click” option. If that box is checked, a mouse click anywhere on this slide will advance the program to the next slide. If it is NOT checked, this will not occur, and only the buttons will be interactive. If we click the cursor in this box, it will toggle the option on or off. If we want this condition to be the same for all our slides in the program, we can click the “Apply to All Slides” option below. (Don’t forget to save whatever changes we make!!!) • Less critical but still interesting is the mode of slide transition. Up to now a new slide just appeared when we clicked the arrow. But there are other options as you will see when you click on the red arrow below.

  30. At the top of this menu is the “Apply to selected slides” heading. This determines how the program moves from slide to slide. There is a long list of options under this heading. But being a person who can’t make a decision, I chose the “Random Transition” option. • Hence, if you toggle back and forth between this and previous slide you should see some variation in the mode of transition. • Of course, you can set the speed and even add sound under the “Modify transition” heading. • But be careful. If you then click on the “Apply to All Slides” button, the effects will generalize to all the slides in your lesson. Be sure that’s what you want

  31. SOUNDS—can add a lot of life and sparkle to a lesson. You may have noticed that in the Action Buttons and Texts as well as the Slide Transitions we have looked at, there were options to interject sounds into the action. Power Point has a small library of sounds, but you may have access to others which you would like to use. On the next slide are some sounds taken from a scene entitled … THE RETURN OF DR. HALL

  32. If we have found a sound file some place else that is compatible with Power Point (many of them are), we can Insert the file into our lesson slide by using the “Insert” pull downmenu, the “Movies and Sounds” option and then the “Sound from File” option. The procedure for locating and opening (inserting) the sound file is the same as that used in all programs to find and open any file. • I have also had success in copying and pasting sound files directly into my lesson slides. Here is one I copied from another program. If you click on it, you may recognize the voice of the Department Chairperson…

  33. If we are in the PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT mode of Power Point (as opposed to the SHOW or PRESENTATION mode) we can click once on the picture of the “speaker” to copy it. It should get some small circles around it.. Then, while the circles are there we can copy (Ctrl & C) and paste (CTRL & V) to capture it and put it into a different lesson slide…in this case we will paste it into the Negative Reinforcement slide of our three slide lesson Project. If you wish, you can try copying the Speaker Icon on the previous slide right into your own program.

  34. Once the sound icon is on the proper slide, there are some decisions and adjustments that need to be made. They include: • 1. Do we want to the icon to be visible when we present the lesson. • 2. How do we want to start the sound file to play. • 3. When do we want the sound file to play. When these decisions are made, the adjustments can be accomplished by opening the “Slide Show” pull down menu and scrolling down to the “Custom Animation” option. (Remember, the speaker icon still has the circles around it to indicate that we are modifying it.)

  35. When we click on the “Custom Animation”option, a “Custom Animation”Control Menu appears on the right side of the screen. This will be used to modify our sound file, as well as to add effects to other objects, like a text box. Please notice that the sound icon still has the small circles around it. That means it is represented in the Custom Animation Control Menu by the highlighted box which, in this case, is labeled “media 4.”

  36. If we click the cursor on the small down arrow to the right side of the Media 4 box, another pop up menu appears. The first three choices in this menu determine how we will start the sound file. • If we choose the first, “Start on Click,”the sound will not begin until the viewer clicks on the sound icon. • If we chose the second, “Start with Previous,” it will begin automatically when the slide opens. This is the one we will choose for now • And, if we chose the third, “Start after Previous,” it will begin automatically after any other special effect on the card is executed. • If we choose the fourth “Effect Options,” however, a new important pop up menu appears called Play Sound.

  37. This “Play Sound” pop up menu has three different pages represented by three Tabs: • The first one,” Effect,” doesn’t really concern us now. • The second, “Timing,” is useful if we want to delay the initiation of the sound or have it repeated. Please notice that the “Start” box already has “With Previous,” which we had selected before. If we hadn’t, we could do it now here also. It is important also for our Project, under “Triggers,” to check the first radial button, Animate as part of click sequence”. • The third, Sound Settings, is necessary to hide the sound icon when the lesson is playing, if that is what we want to do.

  38. If we click on the “Sound Setting” Tab, we get a menu that contains two options: Play Options under which is Sound volume, and Display Options. The latter is particularly important because we may not want the icon (e.g., the picture of the speaker) to be visible when the lesson is running. If we check the box under the Display option by the sentence, “Hide sound icon during slide show” this will be the case. • Lets see how these few features look when they have been added to our Three Slide Lesson.

  39. Categorizing Lesson: Question #1 Which picture does not belong?

  40. Sorry, wrong picture!Please try again. Please Click here to return

  41. YES, YES, YOU ARE A ROARING SUCCESS, YOU TAKE THE CAKE! That was CORRECT.

  42. OUT OF MEMORY PLEASE DEPOSIT $500 FOR 3 MINUTES • We have only two more things to discuss before I leave you with a very profound philosophical concept by one of the greats of antiquity to guide your therapy development! • The first relates to toggling between theProgramming (Presentation) mode and the Showing mode; and the second pertains to saving the presentation in either mode. This should take no more than THREE MINUTES to process!

  43. When we are developing a program in Power Point, the computer monitor shows things like the list of our slides in a column to the left, a Central work area ( the slide we are working on), and maybe some menu, likeCustom Animation, to the right. These are the tools by which we build and modify the program. Whenever Power Point is in this Development mode, we can make changes. But if we want to see how the program will look when we present it, we must switch to the Show mode.

  44. To switch from the Development mode to the Show mode we must click on a particular icon that looks like either one of the following… • They are located in the right and left bottom corners (indicated by the arrows). The icon on the left is always visible. The Slide Show icon on the right is only visible when the “Custom Animation” menu is on the screen. Once we are in the Presentation (show) mode, we can get back to the Development mode simply by hitting the escape (ESC) key.

  45. Now that we have our program developed, we need to save it. Actually we should have been saving it frequently all the way along by holding down the “Control” key while we hit the “S” key (i.e., Ctrl-S) every time we added something we wouldn’t want to lose. But the first time we save our Program we will always use the “Save As” option under the “File” menu.

  46. First we must decide where to save it. In this case, in a new folder called “Power Point Lesson” (located on the desktop). • Then we must give it a name, like “Categori-zation Exercise Development.” • And then we must save it in some form, in this case, the Presentation mode if we wish to keep working on the program.

  47. When a file saved in the Presentation mode is opened, it is displayed in the development mode, which means that all of the tools for working on the program are visible on screen. • But if we wish to have the program open in a play only mode, we will need to save the program (file) as a “Power Point Show.”

  48. When a file saved as a show is opened by clicking on it, the program appears and runs as a full screen interactive lesson. No developmental tools are visible or available. However, the file could be opened through Power Point and then modifications could be made. Which leaves us with just one more topic of discussion. One of your Herculean tasks for CD 485 was to make a Three Card Therapy Program. After you have done that the next Herculean task is to use the skills you learned in the first Task to develop a Three (or more but not necessary) Card Speech Generating Device (SGD) program. The only new skill, perhaps, you would need to do this is to learn how to record your (or some one else’s) voice. I will explain how to do that now. If you have an audio recording program, you could use that to record your voice and then insert that wave file into your program. But it is easier I think to use the recording option of Power Point.

  49. First you use the “Insert Menu” to reach “Sound & Music” and then to the right to “Record Sound.”

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