1 cm 220 college composition ii unit 7: presenting your big idea in an innovative way kelly bradford...

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1 CM 220 College Composition II Unit 7: Presenting Your Big Idea in an Innovative Way Kelly Bradford General Education, Composition Kaplan University

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CM 220College Composition II

Unit 7: Presenting Your Big Idea in an Innovative Way

Kelly BradfordGeneral Education, Composition

Kaplan University

Unit 7 Activities

Activity Details

Reading The Kaplan Guide to Successful Writing, ch. 16 on peer reviewReview tech labs for units 2-6

Invention Lab Draft of tech presentation

Tech lab Games, animation

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THE TECH PRESENTATION

Part I

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Multi-media Outlets for Communicating your Big Idea

How can you BROADCAST your message? Blogs Podcasts Facebook and other online communities PowerPoint Presentations Other ideas? Where do you go for information and why? How does each outlet affect or change the message?

What strategy or outlet would you use to broadcast your message? Who would be your audience and what would your purpose be?

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Reminders

• Units 2-7 contain tech labs with links to tutorials on various technologies.

• You will find sample presentations in Doc Sharing.

• The Writing Center has several workshops on technology.

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Guidelines for Tech Presentation Draft

• Choose a technology and create a presentation with that technology.

• Technologies can be combined, such as adding audio clips to a Power Point presentation.

• Even if you are not visually creative, the message of your big idea should be clear in the method and outcome of the presentation.

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Guidelines for the Presentation Draft

• Overall message is clear and effective• Minimally, five facts, arguments, and/or

insights are presented• Audience is considered in technology

choice and design• Research sources are cited in APA

format (put in separate Word document if desired)

• Presentation is an original creation (except for cited material)

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Guidelines for the Presentation Draft

• You do not have to (and probably will not!) cover every idea in your essay draft in the tech presentation.

• You may choose to focus upon one supporting point in the essay

• You might do a presentation that is supplemental to your essay, such as an advertisement or public service announcement about this problem.

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Tips

• Choose technology wisely—what can you reasonably learn how to do or what do you already know how to do?

• Use your strengths (and know your weaknesses!)

• Plan your message before creating your presentation (use the draft as a starting point)

• Keep it simple• Design for your audience• Motivate your audience—what do you want

them to do/believe after seeing the presentation?

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Where to Post?

• Post the tech presentation and the post-draft outline in the unit 7 Invention Lab/discussion. You will find a separate thread for each.

• Attach file if needed (PPT, for example)• Include link to external site if needed

(Animoto video)• Review sample posts!

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Example: PPT

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Parallelism

• When you make a bulleted list, as you might in a Power Point slide, you want the structure of that list to be parallel, also. So, if your first item in the list is a noun phrase, make all items in the list a noun phrase.

• You can read more about parallelism in The Kaplan Guide to Successful Writing on pp. 260-261.

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Example

My classes last semester were difficult for the following reasons:•Lengthy reading assignments•Numerous unannounced quizzes•Difficult final examsNote: the list follows an adjective/noun structure.

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Animoto and Prezi

• Alternatives to traditional presentations

• Animoto “animates” slides and images

• Prezi creates a more dynamic “flow” and allows easy uploading of YouTube videos

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Animoto and Prezi

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Podcasts and Blogs

• Methods for disseminating information to a wide audience, either in audio or written form

• Podcasts can be saved in audio files like an MP3

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Effective Writing Podcast Series

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Fed Up with Lunch Blog

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CITING SPECIAL SOURCES FOR PRESENTATIONS

Part II

Citing Guidelines

•Cite copyrighted material•This includes photographs,

graphs, charts, maps, music, and videos

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Photographs

Artist's last name, artist’s initials. (Year). Title of work [Photograph]. Retrieved from URL or web address.

Tilcock, W. (2011). University of California, Davis [Photograph]. Retrieved from http://lightbox.time.com/2011/12/07/time-picks-the-top-10-photos-of-the-year/#5

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Music Recording

Songwriter, W. W. (Date of copyright). Title of song [Recorded by artist if different from song writer]. On Title of album [Medium of recording]. Location: Label. (Recording date if different from copyright date).

Lovett, L. (1996). That’s right (you’re not from Texas). On The road to Ensenada. Nashville, TN: Curb Music Company.

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YouTube Video

Poster last name, first initial. (Date). Name of video [Video file]. Retrieved from. . .

Anner, Z. (2010, June 13). Zach’s audition: Oprah’s search for the next tv star [Video file.] Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OIBS6LeXnT4.

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EFFECTIVE PEER FEEDBACK

Part III

Peer review in the real world

• Journals use “peer review” to critique and select articles for publication

• Architecture schools use “juries” of peers and instructors to critique projects and offer advice

• Many jobs will ask groups of employees to work on a project, and typically, the collaboration will involve critique and revision

How have I been using peer review?

• Comments from classmates and friends about your project

• Discussion board responses • Formal peer reviews in previous

courses?

Common misconceptions and concerns

• “I’m not a great writer (or technically savvy), so how can I offer advice?”

• “I’m scared about getting critiqued by someone else. What if she hates my paper?”

• “How can a classmate give me good advice? I don’t care about what anyone but the teacher has to say since she is the one giving me the grade.”

Things to avoid

Not helpful. . .why?I really liked this presentation/paper.I thought the images on your slides were great!Some other examples would be helpful.This is boring.

Helpful feedbackMuch better

While you have a lot of interesting information in your presentation, I’m unsure what your “big idea” is. Maybe you could include a slide that covers your proposal for solving the problem you outline in the rest of the presentation.

You might include a statistic to let your audience know how big of a problem this is. I read this great article in the Washington Post this week that would give you some good numbers; here is the link. . .

I have had a really hard time creating parallel structure in my bullet points, too. I found this helpful website that you might review . . .

“Whole Lotta Cantin’ Going On”

• What is Ebert’s point about film criticism in this blog post?

• What examples does he offer from reviews of Inception?

• What does he see problematic about a site like Rotten Tomatoes?

• How would his recommendations relate to the peer reviewing process or persuasive writing in general?

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Responses for this week’s Invention Lab

• Be specific in your suggestions for improvement. For example, note difficulties in reading text on a slide and recommend how the author could make the slides more visually appealing.

• Be constructive and note strengths as well as weaknesses in the presentation.

• Be honest and sincere in your response. Remember that the more advice everyone provides in this week’s Invention Lab, the better the final projects can be!

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Guidelines for critique

• Be tactful • Be specific• Don’t focus on grammar, usage, mechanics, or

spelling• Highlight strengths • Note phrasing that needs clarification• Indicate how the presentation can be strengthened

based on the assignment guidelines• Note any questions you still have about the author’s

“big idea” that the presentation is not answering

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