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Using PowerPoint in class: PPT lectures. Mitchell S. Sommers Dept. of Psychology Washington University. Overview. Deciding whether to use powerpoint Advantages Disadvantages Personal experiences Most examples from Psychology Appropriate for many fields. Art History.
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Using PowerPoint in class: PPT lectures Mitchell S. Sommers Dept. of Psychology Washington University
Overview • Deciding whether to use powerpoint • Advantages • Disadvantages • Personal experiences • Most examples from Psychology • Appropriate for many fields
Art History Highlight specific points Albrecht Durer, Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, Woodcut, 1498
Biology • Genus Helianthus • flower typically 10-12” wide • edible seeds • yield oil • grown primarily in Southern U.S.
Should you use powerpoint • Extremely useful for • Maintaining organization • Highlighting important points • Legibility (especially in large classrooms) • Integration with the web • Keeping people’s attention- “pizzazz” factor
Should you use powerpoint • Not very good for: • Discussion based classes • Creative feedback • Flexibility
Other factors to consider • Time • New prep: 3-4 hours/1 hour lecture • Convert old prep: 2-3 hours/1 hour lecture • Previous knowledge • Very easy to learn • Learn basics in about 1 hour
Other factors to consider • Do student like the powerpoint presentations • Fall course evaluations for Psych 100
General guidelines • How I’ve used powerpoint • As general outline • Minimal text • General design guidelines • How much information per lecture • How much information per slide
One slide for every 2 or 3 minutes of lecture time 5-6 items per slide For every 50 minutes of lecture time, you can display 15-20 slides (2-3 minutes per slide). If you plan to have too many slides, you will not give your students enough time to read each slide and comprehend what you are trying to teach them. Do not go over 5-6 items per slide, or it will become too crowded to read. The font size has to be reduced due to the amount of information displayed, so legibility suffers with long bulleted lists or text passages. How Much Information?
Recommend at least this size General design guidelines (36 point) • 10 point • 20 point • 30 point • 40 point • 50 point • 60 point
Which Background is Best? Text Text Text • Temptation is to get very fancy • High contrast (light on dark works best) • Red on black (looks great on monitor, projects poorly)
Integration of multi-media • Real advantage of using powerpoint • Can integrate almost any medium • Pictures • Sound • Video • Animations • Web pages
Using pictures as examples Written points • Can perceive things that aren’t really there • Can get people to perceive a triangle by using other shapes to create the three vertices
Side by side comparisons Is the image of man in tie the same size? With depth cues Without depth cues
Adding pictures not always better • Too much information • Generally one graphic per slide • Graphic should be focus • Text should complement graphic
Sources for pictures • Scan from textbook, pictures, or slides • Web – ok but very inefficient
Integrating sound • Useful applications • Music or music theory courses • Compare same music by different orchestras • Language courses • Present different dialects • General background music • Can be distracting • Demonstrations • Hearing loss
What does hearing loss sound like? Severe hearing loss Moderate hearing loss Mild hearing loss No hearing loss
Integrating video • Allows for playing short segments • Many videos available on Web • Leaves lasting image • Example • Stanley Milgram experiment • Telling vs. seeing
Milgram experiment-text only • Study on obedience to authority • Confederate acts as a “learner” • Real subject acts as a “teacher” • Teacher and learner put in separate rooms • Teacher reads lists of words. • If “learner” makes a mistake Milgram tells teacher to give next level of electric shock • No shock actually delivered but wants to see how far subject will go • Finds most subjects will deliver shocks even when the “learner” screams out loud
Powerpoint and the web • Can publish slides to web after lectures • Can publish before lecture • Especially useful when have many diagrams • Convenience of having lecture always available • Latest is to use PDA for showing powerpoint lecture
Real life example • First few slides from initial lecture in Psych 100 • Start with film –showing history of mental health in America • Show several pictures of early Psychologists • Helps make history more realistic
Wilhelm Wundt Structuralism – First school of Psychology • Founded by Wilhelm Wundt • First laboratory for study of Psychology • Leipzig, Germany 1879 • Basic ideas of Structuralism • Components of experience • Study through introspection (science?) • Integration of components • Example
Summary • Powerpoint advantages • Useful for many disciplines • Integration of multi-media • Increased student attention • Convenience • Basic design considerations • Avoid having too much information • Avoid excessive use of multimedia End with a bang!!