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best gets 10. please take your time in developing a good answer

2006-07-30 16:24:58 · 4 answers · asked by rvd_whatever3 2 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

4 answers

I know it's a little lazy, but there is an excellent PowerPoint presentation on this very topic at:

http://www.dartmouth.edu/~biomed/new.htmld/lgr_powerpoint.pdf

Why reinvent the wheel?

2006-07-30 20:23:42 · answer #1 · answered by mel 4 · 1 0

1. Looking/talking at the screen is a big one. Talking to the audience is really important.
2. Having too much text on each slide is bad. Slides should have little text and then be talked about by the presentor. Nobody wants to read tons of text on slides.
3. Too many showy effects. Some is good, but too much is unneccesary.
4. Talking clearly and slowly is important. I've seen a lot of people talking too fast trying to get through their slides.
5. Slides that are unreadable because they're not centered on the screen when projected/color scheme is hard on the eyes/too busy/etc. It's important to be able to read them.

2006-07-30 16:31:43 · answer #2 · answered by X 4 · 0 0

saying "umm" and "uhh" also saing "and" too much can take a great presentation to a so-so one. becuase it makes it sound unstructured and it makes you look uneducated, i mean you made the powerpoint you shouldnt stumble trying to get through it. and also many people feel that they dont need to use much body language becuase all thier info is on the screen, but its important to ingage your audience with your voice and body language, it says "im passionate and knowledgable about this, so listen up" its all in the confidence baby

2006-07-30 16:34:04 · answer #3 · answered by candi b 4 · 0 0

Using PowerPoint.

It's a terrible piece of software. There are better and cheaper alternatives.

2006-07-30 20:45:33 · answer #4 · answered by John K 2 · 0 0

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