[At-Large] Presentation Tips

Seth M. Reiss seth.reiss at lex-ip.com
Sat Jun 20 19:18:22 UTC 2020


That is not an accurate summary of the fair use doctrine in the U.S.  The doctrine is much more narrow than that.

 

From: At-Large <at-large-bounces at atlarge-lists.icann.org> On Behalf Of Eduardo Diaz
Sent: Saturday, June 20, 2020 8:58 AM
To: Marita Moll <mmoll at ca.inter.net>
Cc: At-Large Worldwide <at-large at atlarge-lists.icann.org>
Subject: Re: [At-Large] Presentation Tips

 

Marita:

 

You can use them under the fair use clause of the US Copyright Law (this may apply in US only) which means that you can use them for things like teaching or illustrating a concept.

 

-ed

 

On Sat, Jun 20, 2020 at 11:16 AM Marita Moll <mmoll at ca.inter.net <mailto:mmoll at ca.inter.net> > wrote:

Great tips Jonathan -- but we can't just take images from the web and stick them on powerpoints destined for a world wide audience and which will continue to exist in archives. Got a solution for that? 

Marita

On 6/20/2020 10:10 AM, Jonathan Zuck wrote:

Folks,

At the request of “management,” I’m working on a class on PowerPoint and how to use it for Presentations, Videos and Course development but it will be quite a while before it is finished. In the meantime,  Maureen asked if I would simply share some presentation tips so, here are some, in rough format. I hope they are helpful. JZ

 

FACTS

1.	People cannot listen and read at the same time. 
Period. Both activities engage the language center of the brain. They will do only one and, more often than not, that's read. If they are reading the same slides you are, then why are you there?
2.	Slides should supplement the talk, not the other way around. 
The big joke is that during EVERY Zoom meeting, people ask if the slides will be available. It's funny first because the answer is ALWAYS yes but, more importantly, your slides should not be able to stand on their own.
3.	People CAN absorb pictures and listen at the same time 
Looking and listening engage different, complimentary, parts of the brain. The best analogy for a good presentation is a documentary film. They generally have narration and visuals. Imagine if Ken Burn's documentary about the American Civil War was a series of PowerPoints with titles and bullets!

 

ADVICE ON SLIDES

1.	Only pictures and punchlines
2.	6 words or LESS
3.	Bring People Back
Ideally, people spend more time looking at you than your slides. This is harder in the virtual world, for sure, especially if there's no video, but consider a blank slide or a picture of yourself as you explain something. Tell people to close their eyes, even!
4.	Turn sentences into pictures and punchlines 
In other words, edit down sentences to the bare minimum to be understood, make numbers Arabic instead of text and make them bigger and different colors than the text. A sentence like “Research shows that ninety-five percent of applications for community priority evaluation failed to gain approval,” could be represented on a slide as

5.	Notes in Notes Section
If you wish to include explanations in your slide deck, do it in the notes section. Then they are there for you to use and EVEN available to share by making a PDF of the Notes View, instead of the slide view! Another benefit of putting what you plan to say iin the Notes is that you can often share them with the interpreters in advance.
6.	Rehearse
It’s the only way you’ll ever know how long your presentation is becoming or whether you’re going to stumble over a particular phrase or simply be at a loss for words. You can use the “Rehearse Timing,” feature under the Slide Show  menu.

 

 

 

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