+ All Categories
Home > Design > Lecture design

Lecture design

Date post: 12-Nov-2014
Category:
Upload: dag-hanoa
View: 914 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
A short version of the philosophy of "PresentationZen" from Garr Reynolds and "Slidology" fra Nacy Duarte. Language Norwegian.
Popular Tags:
109
Presentation Zen
Transcript
Page 1: Lecture design

Presentation Zen

Page 2: Lecture design

Unsaturated fatty acids inhibit 2nd phase.

Mix DOPC (unsat’d) or DPPC (sat’d) at different ratios,

with sphingolipid +/- cholesterol, at 23oC or 37oC. Assay

by fluorescence quenching of marker that only sees sol

phase lipid. Phase separation indicated by break in slope

of quenching curves.

See 2nd phase at 23oC with increasing DPPC

.

Need cholesterol to obtain 2nd phase at 37oC.

Cholesterol promotes 2nd phase formation

Sphingolipid and cholesterol cause distinct phase to form in pure lipid mixtures containing phospholipid

with saturated fatty acid chains

Page 3: Lecture design

”Nesten hver eneste PowerPoint

presentasjon stinker som et råttent egg”

Seth Godin

Page 4: Lecture design
Page 5: Lecture design
Page 6: Lecture design
Page 7: Lecture design

Du kan fremføre på en annen måte

Page 8: Lecture design

Kast alle dine

Powerpoint presentasjoner

Page 9: Lecture design
Page 10: Lecture design

Må du virkelig spørre?

Page 11: Lecture design

De er tekstbaserte med hierakiske nivå

og undertitler – og kun tekst

Fjern teksten…

Page 12: Lecture design

Hvor skal vi?

Page 13: Lecture design

Kontakt med publikum

Page 14: Lecture design

Matrix pills

Page 15: Lecture design

Forberedelse Design Fremføring

Page 16: Lecture design

Forberedelse

Page 17: Lecture design

Publikum

Page 18: Lecture design

Formell

Uformell

Dokument Presentasjon

Page 19: Lecture design

Begynn analogt

Page 20: Lecture design

Kjernebudskapet

Page 21: Lecture design

Tenk som et barn

Page 22: Lecture design

Hva er viktig?

Page 23: Lecture design

– midten

-slutt

start

En historie

Page 24: Lecture design

Etter 10 minutter mister

publikum gradvis

oppmerksomhet

Page 25: Lecture design

10 minutters regelen

10 20 30 40 50

Minutter av en time

Oppmerksomhet

Page 26: Lecture design

Følelsesmessig relevant

hvert 10. minutt

Page 27: Lecture design

Nancy Duarte

Page 28: Lecture design

Prosessen

Page 29: Lecture design

Brainstorming

Page 30: Lecture design
Page 31: Lecture design

Gruppering

Page 32: Lecture design

Story Board

Text Text Design

2 Good Graph

Design

3

Text Text

Storyboard Images

Design Principle 1

Cluttered Image

Bad Graph

Text

Story Frames

Title & Intro

Design

4

Page 33: Lecture design

Slideview

Page 34: Lecture design

Analog

Kjernebudskap

Fortellingen

Page 35: Lecture design

Design

Page 36: Lecture design
Page 37: Lecture design

Enkelhet

Page 38: Lecture design

Tilbakeholdenhet

Page 39: Lecture design

Amplifisering gjennom

forenkling

Page 40: Lecture design

enkelhet I less is more I naturlig

Page 41: Lecture design

Design konsepter

Page 42: Lecture design

Signal to noise

Page 43: Lecture design

1-7-7 regelen –Hva er det?

• Ha bare hovedsakelig én idé pr slide

• Sett inn bare syv linjer tekst max

• Bruk bare syv ord pr linje max

• Spørsmålet er – er dette mest effektivt?

• Er denne metoden virkelig et godt råd?

• Er dette virkelig en passende, effektiv ”visuell”?

• Denne ene sliden har bare syv kulepunkter!

Page 44: Lecture design
Page 45: Lecture design

COGNITIVE

LOAD

THEORY

(Prof. John Sweller, University of NSW)

Page 46: Lecture design

kognitiv load = den mengden

arbeid som kreves for å forstå eller

lære noe

Page 47: Lecture design
Page 48: Lecture design
Page 49: Lecture design
Page 50: Lecture design
Page 51: Lecture design
Page 52: Lecture design
Page 53: Lecture design
Page 54: Lecture design
Page 55: Lecture design
Page 56: Lecture design
Page 57: Lecture design
Page 58: Lecture design
Page 59: Lecture design
Page 60: Lecture design
Page 61: Lecture design
Page 62: Lecture design

Gjennomsnittlig PPT slide: 40 ord

Page 63: Lecture design

BIRD

10% 65%

Page 64: Lecture design

B

According to John Medina, your brain interprets every letter as a picture so wordy slides literally choke your brain.

Page 65: Lecture design

Picture Superiority Effect (PSE)

Page 66: Lecture design

Tomrom

Page 67: Lecture design

Asymmertrisk balanse

Page 68: Lecture design

Rule of thirds

Page 70: Lecture design
Page 71: Lecture design

Nurse Daryll

Page 72: Lecture design

Kontrast

Page 73: Lecture design
Page 74: Lecture design
Page 75: Lecture design
Page 76: Lecture design
Page 77: Lecture design

Nærhet

Page 78: Lecture design
Page 79: Lecture design
Page 80: Lecture design

Alignement

Page 81: Lecture design
Page 82: Lecture design

Repitisjon

Page 83: Lecture design
Page 84: Lecture design
Page 85: Lecture design
Page 86: Lecture design
Page 87: Lecture design
Page 88: Lecture design
Page 89: Lecture design
Page 90: Lecture design
Page 91: Lecture design
Page 92: Lecture design
Page 93: Lecture design
Page 94: Lecture design
Page 95: Lecture design

Fremføring

Page 96: Lecture design

Naturlighet

Page 97: Lecture design

Å være i

øyeblikket

Page 98: Lecture design

Kontakt

Page 99: Lecture design

Pauser

Page 100: Lecture design

Less is more

Page 101: Lecture design

Fjern barriærer

Møterom, utstyr, fjernkontroll, support, backup

Page 102: Lecture design

Foreberedelse Design Fremføring

Page 103: Lecture design

Hans Rosling

Page 104: Lecture design

Du kan fremføre på en annen måte

Page 105: Lecture design

Det neste steg

Page 106: Lecture design

Kontinuerlig forbedring

Page 107: Lecture design

Gjør det beste ut av det!

Page 108: Lecture design

http://www.istockphoto.com/

Page 109: Lecture design

Slutt www.slideshare.net/superdoc


Recommended