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UNIT 7
Timing and Rehearsing
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See our entire collection of online tutorials |
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Follow these steps to create speaker's notes:
2. Click the View menu, then click Notes Page. You can also click the Notes Page View button in the lower-left hand corner of the PowerPoint window. A page will appear containing the slide and a text box.
4. Click in the text box and type your notes.
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The following steps show you how to print just the speaker's notes.
3. Click the File menu, then click Print. The Print dialog box will appear.
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Follow these steps to time your presentation:
3. 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. 4. 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.
Note: You click No because you are only timing the show. You would click Yes if you wanted to use the recorded timings to automate your presentation.
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To automate your presentation, you must set timings for each slide. A good way to set the timings is to use the Rehearse Timings feature. Follow these steps to add timings to your slides and automate your presentation:
2. Rehearse your Slide Show as you did in the previous section. When your presentation is done, a message box appears, asking you if you want to record the timings. 3. 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.
Note: Remember, you can also set timings for your slides using the Slide Transition dialog box. A disadvantage of this method, though, is that you're only guessing at how long each slide should run. |
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Shh. Don't tell our producer that. We might be out of a job! |
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. The following steps show you how to create a self-running kiosk presentation with automatic timings.
2. Click the Slide Show menu, then click Set Up Show. The Set Up Show dialog box will appear.
4. Under Advance slides, click Using timings, if present.
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Wow! How empowering! Power to the people! |
2. Under Show type, click the option Presented by a speaker (full screen). 3. Under Advance slides, click the option Manually.
Now, the viewer can advance through the slide show using the mouse or the keyboard. |
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Make your presentation easier to view by adding action buttons. When you add an action button to a slide, you give the viewer an obvious place to click the mouse. The following steps show you how to add a Forward action button to your slides. When viewers click the Forward button they will advance to the next slide.
2. Click the Slide Show menu, point to Action Buttons, then click the Forward Action button. The pointer changes into a cross.
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Experiment on your own with adding other action buttons to your slides. For instance, try adding the Beginning action button to the last slide of your presentation. When viewers click this button, they will return to the first slide in the show.
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PowerPoint: Not Just for Presentations The following interview has been published with permission of My Favorite Teacher Magazine (MFT). MFT spoke to Mr. Ed U. Kayshun to find out how he manages to pull off such fascinating parents' nights each year. He's been getting rave reviews - and MFT brings you the scoop on how it's done. MFT: Well Mr. Kayshun, we've been hearing a lot about your parents' nights. I understand they're always a big hit -parents are actually looking forward to them for weeks in advance. What's your secret? Ed: The secret is in the presentation. I've always worked hard to find new ways to present info - because we really are novelty seeking animals, after all. Now that I have PowerPoint to help me out, it's even easier. MFT: How does PowerPoint help? Ed: It is really quite invaluable to me, to be honest. By using PowerPoint, you can run presentations automatically, giving you time to cruise around and shmooze with the guests. You just run the presentations on a loop - and leave them there for parents to check out at their own leisure. MFT: Wow. That sounds like a real time-saver! What kinds of presentations do you run? Ed: The possibilities are endless, really. It's up to you. For example, you can present an animated view of photosynthesis, poetry recordings, school renovation plans, or stats from all the different sports teams. MFT: So, whose presentations do you use? Ed: You can feature work by teachers and students. Once again, it's your choice. That's the great thing about PowerPoint - it's so versatile. And unlike human speakers, it never goes hoarse. MFT: Well Ed. It sounds like you've really got something going on with this parents' night thing. I'm planning to make it down for the next one - so I hope to see you there. Any last words on how to make a successful night of it? Ed: Just use PowerPoint on loop - and maybe give out some free pie. MFT spoke to math teacher Dave I. Ding to see how he uses PowerPoint presentations to teach math drills to his students. It's a pretty short interview because it's just so simple to use. MFT: So, Mr. Ding. I hear you've been using PowerPoint to create drill cards. Tell me more… Dave: Well, there's not much to tell, really. You just set PowerPoint onto automated presentation and it runs itself. Then you have some extra time for marking and lesson planning while students watch your presentation. MFT: Oh. So, what kind of presentations do you do? Dave: I like to use it for the good old multiplication tables, mostly. Sometimes I like to record myself reading them, because I have to admit to a great fondness for my own voice. I know some language arts teachers who like to use the automated presentation for teaching students to pronounce the vowels and other phonetics. It's really great. MFT: I see... Well, uh, is there anything else you have to say about it? Dave: Uhhhh… Not really… Nothing I can think of because well uh… ya - it's just so simple that I think I've explained it already. MFT has made contact with social studies teacher Ms. Tess Ting to find out more about how she sets up quiz stations that allow her students to work on their own. Her students seem to love it. MFT: Students aren't usually too excited at the thought of doing tests and quizzes. But you seem to have inspired some kind of enthusiasm in your classroom. How is this possible? Tess: I've managed to do it with PowerPoint - by creating multiple-choice quiz questions that basically work with any topic. MFT: How do you do it? Tess: I write a test that contains four answer choices for each question. Then I place four action buttons next to each answer choice - with one right answer, of course, and three wrong ones. If students choose the wrong answer, they are sent to a "try again" page that directs them back to the question. If they choose the right answer, they advance to the next question. MFT: That sounds like it would be a fun quiz to do - but it also sounds like a lot of hard work for you. Tess: It is hard work - and it's definitely not something you can do overnight. But everyone knows hard-workers are drawn to the teaching profession. Another thing - while you can't use it to track the student's final score on the test, the student still benefits from working to find the right answer. MFT: Do you think it's really worth it for you to put in so much effort? Tess: Oh definitely! If you choose the right topics, you can use the same quiz stations year after year. You can also trade your quizzes with teachers in other classes. MFT: That does sound worthwhile. Thanks for sharing this info today. |