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Lesson: Creating a Clear, Accurate, Engaging Presentation
Description
Once students have determined the best form of representation to communicate their research findings, they need to create a presentation that is clear, accurate, and engaging. This is best accomplished if students understand the criteria by which their presentation will be judged. Developing this criteria as a class, and then using the criteria to create a rubric for use in creating the final presentation provides both meaning and understanding for students about what will be expected in the final presentation that is clear, accurate, and engaging.
Learning Outcomes I Suggested Procedure I Assessment for this Lesson
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Materials for this Offline lesson: |
Time allotment: 50
minutes Grade Level: Grade 3 - 12 Information Literacy Standard: 3. The student who is information literate uses information accurately and creatively. |
Students will generate a list of ideas to create a clear, accurate, and engaging
presentation that will become the guidelines for their presentation
Students will create a presentation that is clear -the information is easily
understood, accurate - the information is correct, and engaging - the audience
wants to learn more.
Students will learn to self assess their own presentations
Set-up
Have students in cooperative groups to facilitate the cutting and copying of ideas generated for a clear, accurate, and engaging presentation
Discuss with students the importance of creating a presentation where the information
is clear, the audience can understand it, accurate, the information is correct;
and engaging, it keeps the audience wanting to hear more.
NOTE: the ideas should fall into three distinct categories:
1) content: what is the information to be conveyed?
2) professional appearance: is the information clear, neat, and accurate?
3) appearance (interface design): am I making appropriate graphic, text, audio choices to support my information?
Type up the information as students categorize and label the categories in
pocket charts, in a check-off list format with a place for student names (see
Presentation Guidelines as a sample guideline),
and a place for another group to sign off on the presentation. Print off a copy
of the list for each set of presenters
The assessment for this assignment is the completed Presentation Guidelines check-off sheet, and the final teacher check. As the teacher goes through the check-off list and the presentation with each group, he/she is able to assess whether or not students understand how to create a clear, accurate, and engaging presentation.
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This page was last
updated February 21, 2002 This lesson was created to support the AT&T/UCLA Initiatives for 21st Century Literacies. Creating a Clear, Accurate, Engaging Presentation was created by Sharon Sutton |