+ All Categories
Home > Documents > PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Date post: 14-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: jan-gleave
View: 214 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
58
PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction
Transcript
Page 1: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

PowerPoint in the Classroom

A tutorial for interactive instruction

Page 2: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Introduction

Page 3: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Introduction

Welcome back to PowerPoint in the Classroom. Welcome back to PowerPoint in the Classroom. Obviously, if you are here you’ve mastered the Obviously, if you are here you’ve mastered the basics of PowerPoint. basics of PowerPoint.

Congratulations.

Now let’s move on to some of the more complicated Now let’s move on to some of the more complicated aspects of PowerPoint that will blow your audience aspects of PowerPoint that will blow your audience away.away.

Page 4: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Part Two Advanced

Page 5: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Transitions and Timing

Page 6: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Transitions and Timing

Let’s start with Slide transitions and Transition timing. These elements can make or break a presentation.

You can also change the order of your slides easily from the Slide Sorter view. Let’s look at this option first.

Page 7: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Slide Sorter

Switching to Slide Sorter View When you go to Slide Sorter View, you see miniatures of all the slides in the presentation, complete with text and graphics. This view is useful for rearranging slides, and for adding transitions to slides.

Page 8: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Slide Sorter

The Slide Sorter View is the easiest place to rearrange the order of your slides.

Page 9: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Slide Transitions

Let's say you're doing a slide show. Everyone expects one slide to just click to another. But with transition effects, you can make slides dissolve into one another. It looks very high tech.

Page 10: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Slide Transitions

A transition is a special effect used to introduce a slide during a slide show.

There are two ways that you can transition slides:

» On a Mouse click

» On a Timer

Page 11: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Slide Transitions

Page 12: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Timing Transitions

Timing a transition If you want your slide show to run automatically, you must add timing to the slides. When you add timing to a slide, you specify the number of seconds to remain on each slide.

Page 13: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Timing

Here's how you add timing to your slides: 1. Select the slide you want to add a timing to by clicking it. 2. In Slide Sorter View, click the Slide Show menu, and then click

Slide Transition. The Slide Transition dialog box will appear. 3. Under Advance, click the check box next to Automatically

After.

4. In the seconds box, type the number of seconds to remain on the slide. For example, 5 seconds.

5. Click the Apply button. When you run your slide show, the slide that you have applied the

timing to will only remain on screen for five seconds.

Page 14: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Animation and Effects

Page 15: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Animation and Effects

PowerPoint gives you quite a few ways to create a lively presentation.

Through the use of animation and effects your slide show will come to life.

Page 16: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Custom Animation

Adding animation through the use of the Custom Animation function.

Page 17: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Animation with Sound

Adding sounds with your animation is easy. Just remember because you can doesn’t mean you should.

See what we mean.

Page 18: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Animating Text

You can add animated text boxes into your presentation as we saw in the last slide.

This text is introduced by letter.

Page 19: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Animating Charts and Graphs

Animating a chart You can make charts more interesting by animating them. In a Slide Show, an unanimated chart appears onscreen all at once. When you animate a chart, the chart appears "bit by bit". You specify the way the elements of the chart will appear in the Custom Animation dialog box.

Page 20: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Animating Charts and Graphs

Factor 1

Factor 2

Factor 3

Factor 4

Page 21: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Preview Animation

Page 22: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

When you are ready to see your slide show in action simply click on the Slide Show button.

Viewing Your Slide Show

Page 23: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Audio Effects

Page 24: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Audio

When you determine that you want to add music or sound to your PowerPoint presentation you have several choices of file format. You also have choices of how to obtain or create the sound - - recording directly into PowerPoint as a narration, playing it dynamically from your CD drive, or obtaining or creating your own file and then embedding or linking to that file. The types of sound that we’ll discuss are: – Recorded Narration – Music from your personal CD library – Midi files – WAV files – MPEG files – ASF files

Page 25: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Audio for a slide

First, let’s understand some of the terminology: Midi: Pronounced middy, an acronym for Musical

Instrument Digital Interface, a standard adopted by the electronic music industry for controlling devices, such as synthesizers and sound cards, which emit music.

WAV:  WAV is a format for storing sound in files, which was developed jointly by Microsoft and IBM.

MPEG (MP3): – Pronounced m-peg, MP3, the MPEG Audio Layer 3, to use its full name, is a standard for encoding and compressing audio signals. It does a great job of making audio files smaller without losing much quality.

ASF: – Short for Advanced Streaming Format, a streaming multimedia file format developed by Microsoft.

Page 26: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Audio for a slide

PowerPoint makes adding audio files to your presentation very easy.

Page 27: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Audio for a slide

Follow these steps to add your CD music files. Remember, you can only add the music tracks to slides. The track will not attach to objects, animations, or transitions. It will also not embed the file. So you’ll have to keep the CD handy.

Page 28: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Recording Audio for Slide

You can animate the sound file to begin automatically or on a mouse click. For design purposes you can hide the speaker icon to make you slide look cleaner.

Page 29: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Add Audio to Animation

You can add your narration to your animated files.

Page 30: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Audio over several slides

Just as you can add a sound to a single slide, you can also add the sound files to extend over several slides.

Choose your settings here.

Page 31: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Narration

1. On the Slide Show menu, click Record Narration. A dialog box appears showing the amount of free disk space and the number of minutes you can record.

2. Advance through the slide show, and add narration as you go.

3. To save the timings along with the narration, click Yes. To save only the narration, click No. A sound icon appears in the lower-right corner of each slide that has narration.

Page 32: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Multi-Media

Page 33: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Multi-Media

PowerPoint offers a library of video clips to choose from. You can also grab video clips from the Internet or create your own clips using a video camera and video capture board. It's a great way to enhance a presentation.

Page 34: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Multi-Media

Adding Clips from PowerPoint’s Gallery

Page 35: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Multi-Media

Adding your own files, or clips you find on the internet.

Page 36: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Multi-Media

Although it's not necessary to give the icon an animation effect to make it play automatically, the Slide Show looks better when the video screen makes a grand entrance.

To set up the video clip so that it plays automatically, follow these steps:

1. In Slide View, click the video screen icon to select it.

2. Click the Slide Show menu, then click Custom Animation.

3. Select the video clip in the Animation order list.

4. Click the Play Settings tab, then click the check box beside Play using animation order.

Page 37: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Multi-Media

This is a sample AVI file I inserted.

Page 38: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Hyperlinks

Page 39: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Hyperlinks

You can add a hyperlink to your presentation and then use it to go to a variety of locations — for example, a custom show, a specific slide within your presentation, a different presentation altogether, a Microsoft Word document or Microsoft Excel spreadsheet, or an Internet, intranet, or e-mail address. You can create a hyperlink from any object — including text, shapes, tables, graphs, and pictures.

For example this link takes you to the next page.

Page 40: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Hyperlinks for a Website

This is how you create a hyperlink to a website.

Page 41: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Adding Hyperlinks for a file

This is how you create a hyperlink to a file.

Page 42: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Getting Ready to Present

Page 43: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Getting Ready to Present

Presentations can be as elaborate or simple as you want.

You can create automatically running presentations with rehearsed timings.

You can also have a manually operating presentation with note pages and handouts.

The choice is yours.

Let’s go over a few options.

Page 44: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Timing and Rehearsing

Timing and Rehearsing are vital to creating a professional presentation.

1. Click the Slide Show menu, and then click Rehearse Timings. The Slide Show begins and a Rehearsal dialog box appears in the lower-right-hand corner of the screen.

2. Begin speaking and presenting your show.

Page 45: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Timing and Rehearsing

1. If you want to repeat your rehearsal of a slide, click the Repeat button on the Rehearsal dialog box. The current slide repeats and the timing for it starts over.

2. Rehearse your presentation until it's finished. After you're done, a message box appears. It tells you the final running time and it asks you if you want to record the timings to use for viewing the presentation

Page 46: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Automating your Presentation

1. Click No and you will be returned to PowerPoint.

2. Click Yes. PowerPoint will record the time you spend on each slide and apply this to your presentation. Your Slide Show will now run automatically.

Page 47: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Self-Running Presentation

When designing a self-running presentation, you can set up the Slide Show to run with automatic timings, or you can set it up so the viewer can move through the show with mouse clicks.

Click the Slide Show menu, then click Set Up Show.

Page 48: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Self-Running Presentation

1. Under Show type, click Browsed at a kiosk (full screen).

2. Under Advance slides, click Using timings, if present.

Page 49: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Manual Presentations

1. Under Show type, click the option Presented by a speaker (full screen).

2. Under Advance slides, click the option Manually.

Page 50: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Notes Pages

When you give your presentation, you may need to refer to notes to elaborate on a slide's material, or to remind you to mention some detail. In PowerPoint, you can write your speaker's notes while you work on your slides.

Page 51: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Notes Pages

Page 52: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Notes Pages

The best way to use your speaker's notes is to print them out and have a copy handy while you give your presentation. When you print your notes, you have the option of printing both the slide and the notes, or just the notes.

Page 53: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Presentation Handouts

You can print out handouts for your audience just as easily.

Print your handouts 6-per page and save a few trees.

Page 54: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Saving Your Presentation

You can easily pack your presentation on a floppy disk using PowerPoint's Pack and Go Wizard. The Wizard packs your presentation, as well as software necessary to run the program. You then copy the presentation to the computer you will be using to run your presentation.

Then follow the instructions.

Page 55: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Conclusion

Page 56: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Conclusion

Congratulations!

You are now a PowerPoint expert.

We hope these tutorials have answered your questions and illustrated ways of utilizing

this Technology for your classroom.

Page 57: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

Conclusion

We have created a certificate for you to help show off your new knowledge. Simply click on the link and then print out the certificate.

Congratulations!

Page 58: PowerPoint in the Classroom A tutorial for interactive instruction.

References

actden (Digital Education Network) www.actden.com

Microsoft PowerPointwww.microsoft.com/office/

Eyewirewww.eyewire.com


Recommended