PowerPoint Presentations
1.
An
overview of the technical aspects
What
can this technology do?
·
Embed text, links, audio, video and images –
teachers can input the lesson’s content onto slides and accompany it with
relevant engaging and educational video, images and audio.
·
Creates interactive quizzes – teachers can
input quizzes to students’ understanding.
·
Creates concept maps and brainstorms (SmartArt
function) – gives students the ability to ease into a new topic through the
breakdown of concepts these tools offer.
·
Image files – students and teachers can create
images through saving slides as jpg images.
·
Slide transitioning and animation – teachers can
include slide transitions and animations into their slides to increase student
engagement.
·
Edit images e.g. crop, border, filter –
teachers and students can edit images they insert onto their slides to enhance
presentations.
·
Easy to use – functions explained, ‘help’
tool included if needed – easy for contemporary teachers and students to
understanding – “basic” form of technology.
·
Built in spelling, research, thesaurus and
language application – can assist students in expanding their vocabulary and
their spelling and grammar skills.
·
Commenting and notes tool – teachers have the
ability to give student feedback through comments and add to ideas through
notes.
·
Creates charts (e.g. graphs) and shapes –
teachers can input educational visuals to assist student understanding – e.g.
this could help with statistics.
·
Varied background options – teachers can
design bright and vibrant presentations to gain student attention.
What
learning outcomes can they support in a classroom?
·
Improves student comprehension –
students are more likely to retain information if an image or visual is
presented with it.
·
Develops student creativity –
students can design presentations – this allows them to be creative.
·
Assists in student individuality –
students have the ability to personalise images.
·
Improves student understanding – teachers can
test student knowledge through interactive quizzes; allowing teachers to see
areas for improvement and adjust pedagogy accordingly.
·
Improves student feedback – teachers can add
comments to students’ presentations; making it easily identifiable to students
where they can improve.
·
Builds students’ ability to complete self-directed work – students don’t need
to rely on the teacher to explain topics – the presentation can also be
self-directed where students work through slides and then ask their teacher for
help if needed.
What sorts of activities/materials will
they support?
·
Preparing handouts – if teachers use the
notes page layout view they can print their presentation as a hand-out for
students to refer back to after the lesson as revision (Brooks & Byles,
2015).
·
Vocabulary review activities – teachers can
create slideshows of vocabulary words that students need to learn. Ran as a
study show - with the words appearing along with pictures and definitions to
help a student remember the meaning (i.e. a form of technological flash cards) (Brooks
& Byles, 2015).
·
Spelling activities - teachers could have an image of the words they want students to spell on
the side. Then have students say the spelling word and then spell it in their
notebooks. As they spell, or to help them when they get confused, words
could be brought up one letter at a time through mouse click (Brooks &
Byles, 2015).
·
Multi-modal presentations – PowerPoint can be
an option for students when they complete multi-modal tasks for assessment.
·
Oral presentations – students can make a
PowerPoint to accompany their speech to gain audience attention and get their
idea further across. Also if allowed, students can record their oral on their
PowerPoint to avoid getting nervous in person.
·
Introducing a new topic – PowerPoint presentations
can be a great form of direct teaching. Thus, making them an excellent tool to
use especially when students have to gain knowledge of a new topic first, in
order to apply it.
2.
PowerPoint
applied to my own teaching context
Pedagogy
The use of PowerPoints can be applied to my own teaching
context in a number of ways. For example, because one of my chosen disciplines
is English they would be of great assistance. Firstly, they could be used to
advance students’ vocabulary through “vocab study shows” (as mentioned previously).
In addition to this, they could be used as a tool to increase students’
spelling capabilities through providing an effective structure to develop these
skills (see activities/materials sections). Also, in a history teacher context
due to PowerPoints having the ability to make interactive class quizzes I could
use this function to test general knowledge on the current unit’s topic.
Additionally, the use of PowerPoint would make it easy for me to discuss and
share primary sources with the students like images and video footage from the
time of the event. Also, as students are more likely to retain information with
the use of an image or visual I would input this into my pedagogy and make sure
I have plenty of visuals in the presentations to assist students in retaining
information. For an example of how it could be included in my teaching context refer to my example PowerPoint at the bottom of the post.
SAMR
Model in a PowerPoint Presentation Context
Substitution:
Teacher puts class content on presentation slides and
students copy into their notebooks. Therefore, at first PowerPoint is just a
basic ‘substitution’ to teachers writing on whiteboards/chalkboards.
Augmentation:
Class completes quiz using PowerPoint instead of using
pen and paper. The functional benefit here is that teachers can receive almost
immediate feedback on student level of understanding of material if completed
as a whole class activity. The impact of immediate feedback is that students
may begin to become more engaged in learning.
Modification:
Students can record their multimodal presentations onto
their PowerPoints. Students can avoid the nervousness of having to present in
front of the class.
Redefinition:
Whole class lessons are structured on PowerPoints. The
use of video, images and audio accompanying content in the lesson, increases
student engagement and with that increases student educational outcomes. PowerPoint
presentations can be saved and given to students as handouts to refer back to
for revision which hence, makes exam study easier for the students. The
PowerPoint program becomes central to student learning progression with each
lesson being structured using the application.
References
Brooks,
S., & Byles, B. (2015). Ideas for
using PowerPoint in a classroom. Retrieved from http://internet4classrooms.com/ideas_pp.htm
You've come up with some great ideas using the SAMR model- nice work!
ReplyDeleteI love how you consider improving your students vocabulary - I don't think I have seen that from anyone else! It has always been very content focused. It is also great to see that you have focused on engaging your students, rather than just meet the basic criteria of the SAMR model.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jess and Clare - appreciate your feedback!
ReplyDeleteThis is a very informative blog post Louise! Great work! I loved your overview of the learning outcomes and your ideas for the SAMR model of using PowerPoints in the classroom!
ReplyDeleteCheers Brooke
Delete