Prezi- I like to move it, move it
Prezi is now a very well known presentation tool and a great alternative to PowerPoint, but like any tool it has to be used well to achieve the best possible results. The unique aspects of Prezi include the ability to zoom, pan and layer levels of information in a way that offers the best viewing experience for the attendee. In an effort to avoid ‘death by PowerPoint’ people often overuse these aspects of the software and the results are as predictable as PowerPoint, albeit with more motion sickness!
The
main thing to bear in mind when experimenting with Prezi is to step
away from a linear presentation style, this will allow you to dance
around your subject, drawing commonalities and contrasts from different
elements of your topic. There are some great online guides which will
help you, and I suggest you have a look a these, but there is no better
way to get a grip on Prezi than to get your hands dirty.
So rather than walking you through Prezi, I'm going to consider a few general techniques you could use when selling your information and library service. Thinking about how we can exploit the intrinsic qualities of Prezi let’s consider a couple of uses:
Dynamic presentations
The success of this depends on using the functionality of Prezi to tell the story of your argument. Use the fact that you can travel along the canvas with your audience to illustrate the main points of your presentation. Raise a problem, look around it (literally!) , offer solutions and then show the audience how they can take your approach and apply it to their own situations.
Great techniques for this include:
So rather than walking you through Prezi, I'm going to consider a few general techniques you could use when selling your information and library service. Thinking about how we can exploit the intrinsic qualities of Prezi let’s consider a couple of uses:
Dynamic presentations
The success of this depends on using the functionality of Prezi to tell the story of your argument. Use the fact that you can travel along the canvas with your audience to illustrate the main points of your presentation. Raise a problem, look around it (literally!) , offer solutions and then show the audience how they can take your approach and apply it to their own situations.
Great techniques for this include:
- Using a circular structure to link solutions to problems, allowing you to visit and revisit areas of the screen as you talk.
- Zooming in- hiding key points within pictures or other text allows you to expand on arguments without overloading the structure with text.
A Voice in the Wilderness: Personalised Library Services in a Virtual Environment- Meg Westbury
Using one large picture as a background allows you to show detail, the whole picture and the relationships between them.
Techniques to bear in mind:
- Choosing a high-quality, interesting, relevant or relaxing picture to compare or contrast to your subject matter- how about a beach scene to mount your 'Beginners Guide to FRBR'?
- Regularly zoom back out to reveal the big picture- hint, use invisible frames.
- Be careful with your colour choices to ensure that your text really stands out against an image heavy background.
Scale of the Solar System Activity- Todd Ensign
Prezi is a great alternative to a hand out, or for getting your message to those who can’t physically attend your talk. If your voice isn’t there to accompany the presentation you will have to be more reliant on text, but you can do this without resorting to those tried, tested and tired PowerPoint bullets!
Try these:
- Group your presentation/lesson into manageable chunks based on topic or difficulty using frames. Answers or clues can be hidden as text or pictures within the frames.
- Use arrows to emphasise that the course is moving along, consider zooming out after each few sections so remote users can track their progress- you could also offer a recap here.
Not everything is best taught using a projector and a laser pointer, welding, for example, but even if you are not teaching welding you can use Prezi to help bring together your non-projection teaching. Simply use the Prezi as a mindmapping space, the different text colours, frames and arrows allowing you to forge connections between disparate parts of your subject.
By the way, I was wrong about welding. As 21 pages of 'how-to weld' Prezis proves. Go have fun!
Does Prezi mean the end for my PowerPoints?
Relatively new to prezi is the ability to upload and enhance PowerPoint slides. This gives you an opportunity to remix your existing PowerPoint slides, adding value by connecting them in a way that comes naturally to Prezi, but is impossible to do with PowerPoint.
Over to you...
Take some time to experiment with Prezi and think about what kind of angles it could offer to help you sell your service more effectively. Try creating a take-away teaching course, breathe new life into some PowerPoint slides or create a dynamic induction presentation for new staff or students.
A final but important tip about images. Be sure to use high-quality images- .png or convert to .pdf, try Zamzar for free conversion. You can achieve variety or uniformity by mounting your images on frames or applying washes or treatments like drop shadows- Picnik will do all this and more, quickly, easily and most importantly: gratis.
Extra Credit:
Prezi For The Win? Ten Top Tips To Make a Good One- Ned Potter Edited 29/09/11: Ned has pointed out that this guide is now out of date. His revised version is here: The ultimate guide to Prezi.
Prezi: The PowerPoint Alternative?- Lora Helvie-Mason, Communication & Higher Education Blog
Panning back to PowerPoint, let's look at one of its biggest hangouts: Slideshare.The
difficulty with Slideshare is pinning down exactly what it is: it's an
archive, a ready made audience, an inspiration factory and a place to
get yourself noticed. Let's try and untangle this one:
Slideshare: does exactly what it says what it is on the tin
Your personal archive- shared
If
you do a lot of teaching the chances are you have a lot of
PowerPoints knocking around on your machine, your website, your shared
servers, your institutional repository, your cutlery drawer... well
maybe not your cutlery drawer, but you get the picture. Slideshare gives
you an opportunity to host all of your teaching materials in one place, and makes them available in an easily embeddable format for others wishing to share and promote your work.
It's
a small point, but really worth mentioning. This is not your
institutional repository, this is on the open web and can be discovered
by a much wider and variable audience. If someone is looking for an
inspirational teaching presentation they can cite in an article or use
as a great example they are not going to come looking for your work. Put
it where it can be easily found.
Can you think of materials you have produced which could gain a new audience on Slideshare?
Inspiration for you
Okay, so presentations vary from awesome inspiration
to terrible, terrible warnings, but if you are a visual person you
might find that browsing a handful of good presentations on Slideshare
will equal an hour reading how to guides. From individual presentations
to browsing the channels e.g. Pew Internet and American Life Project, The White House, or the Economist Intelligence Unit, there is a wide range of excellent slide sets available for you to learn from.
Browse Slideshare in search of the good, the bad and the ugly. Can you find anything that you could draw inspiration from?
Shareable teaching products, okay, predictable, but what else? What was that about getting noticed?
At
a very basic level Silideshare is just a way to host PowerPoint
presentations and .pdfs. The reason that it mostly contains
presentations is only because we have a pretty fixed mindset regarding
what PowerPoint can do. If you stop thinking about a room sized audience
and start thinking about a panel. One of the most interesting new uses
is to sell not just your service but your self. Have a look at this
great CV
Do you think this could replace (in certain circumstances) your paper CV or resume?
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