bandcool.com bandcool.com
   Main Page -> About Us -> Privacy -> Terms of Use -> Add Your Link -> Add Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

People & Society

Travel & Accommodation

Fashion & Relationships

Investment & Finance

Self Enhancement

Children

Property & Estate

Health & Hygiene

Education & Reference

Jobs & Employment

Policies & Law

Issues & News

Family & Home

Food & Recipe

Culture & Art

Internet & Computers

Indoor Games

Recreation & Entertainment

Shopping & Auction

Business & Commerce

Adventure & Sports

Science & Research

Automobile & Automotive

Medicine & Treatment

 

Main Page –› Education & Reference –› Sociology Courses
 

Eulogy For A Good Book: PowerPoint and the Two Reasons You Need to Understand it

 
Author: Jonathan Steele
Good bye Moby Dick! Farewell Crime and Punishment! Adios National Geographic and Readers Digest!

PowerPoint and the generation of the 7th Millennium rules.

If you're a "Baby Boomer", PowerPoint will likely not appeal to you. Perhaps you will even feel it is evil. But I'll give you two good reasons you ought to understand and appreciate PowerPoint. Your children and grandchildren.

PowerPoint is the way the Generation of the 7th Millennium and beyond will cope in this fast-paced, frenetic world of iPods, search engines and micro-minute attention spans. (If man came on to the scene in the year 4026 BCE then 1975 would mark the beginning of the seventh Millennium

Yes, if you were a teen in '75, you remember reading novels and composing essays for your teachers and professors. On the weekends, you caught movies like Dog Day Afternoon, Mahogany, The Man Who Would Be King, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, Love Story, The Stepford Wives, Three Days of the Condor and Monty Python and the Holy Grail ("Sir, by what name be ye known?" 'reply? "Some call me Tim?")

A good plot, drama, and wit (ok, we weren't perfect then either) ruled the big screen.

But times have evolved. What was a "New York Minute" back then is a New York milli-second today.

The big screen stars born in that notable year include Drew Barrymore, Angelina Jolie, Charlize Theron, and Kate Winslet.

In '75, there were five notable deaths -- Marjorie Main (Ma Kettle), Susan Hayward, The Three Stooges' Larry Fine and Moe Howard. The fifth death at the birth of the 7th Millennium was not noted for almost 20 years.

The death of which I am speaking is the death of reading and comprehension skills.

Many college professors trace the decline of student reading and retention to 1975, or the beginning of the 7th Millennium.

This is manifested by students who take no notes, wear stylish headsets that re-play lectures which were recorded by professors.

Look at how many professors today use PowerPoint presentations and give copies of the slides to their students to use as a study guide.

Do you really think students have time to read when the Internet furnishes information in lightning-quick fashion?

Why are newspapers folding, libraries closing and reader's club subscriptions falling? Perhaps the biggest indictment is the Internet. Yes, the industrial age has died and the information age is alive and well. That is, if you like looking at pictures in shades of PowerPoint blue.

Delivering and receiving information has changed. There are a new set of rules for writing and reading on the web.

One sentence paragraphs are acceptable. None are longer than three sentences. On the better sites, articles are generally no longer than 750 words. That's because reading is done by scanning.

To engage a reader (or scanner as the case may be), psychological tricks like connectives are used to tie one paragraph to the next.

There are two kinds of copy on the Internet. One appeals to traditional readers, the other to the newer generation of the 7th Millennium.

The key to educating 7th Millennium students is PowerPoint. The challenge facing educators, speakers and presenters is creating a lecture that can stand on its own merit, utilizing Power Point as a visual aid rather than making Power Point the presentation.

The generation of the 7th Millennium becomes easily bored. Stimulating students' grey matter neurons requires using our own little grey box of tricks, using word illustrations and probing questions to elevate thinking. Power Point presentations combined with effective speaking tactics are a dynamic one-two punch in the lecture hall.

The future will remember non-predictions of the past as was the case with Jules Vern's novel conception of a facsimile machine several decades before its creation.

Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 and The Max Headroom Story will be 'novel' predictions of the future.

Moving forward, we will no longer look for 15 minutes of fame. No more New York minutes. On the web, things happen in seconds. Our future will soon become our past.

Perhaps the best we can hope for is that everybody will be somebody for 27 seconds. In a world of sound bites, images flashing before our eyes and action movies, the reality is that 27 seconds is an eternity on the net.

Capturing the attention of the generation of the 7th Millennium requires pictures, images, and attention-grabbing devices. PowerPoint is the solution. It is the salvation of tomorrow's classroom.

May we use Power Point Presentations wisely.

Author Bio:

Jonathan Steele is a Registered Nurse, Artist, Free Lance Public Speaker and Web Master of a web site dedicated to helping speakers advance in their skills. You can visit him at www.speechmastery.com/

You can search for this article using: sociology, definition for social science, 10 social sciences, definition of sociology
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
U. S. Coast Guard - A Historical Overview - part nine
 
Exemplary Online Learning
 
Bachelor Degree - Why Not Law?
 
Articulating Boundaries of Behavioral Interaction with Artificial Intelligent Systems
 
How Does An Online University Course Work?
 
Liiberation From Material Bondage Via a Spiritual Vision
 
Space Probes Speed Up
 
Should You Quit School?
 
New Language and How We Learn It
 
Is Your Family Ready for HomeSchooling?
 
 
 
 

Education: How Summer Vacations Reinforce Performance Failure Conditioning

Summer vacation from school is considered by many to be a right. Given that summer vacation is one o ... - Leanne Hoagland-Smith
 

On Dis-ease

We are all terminally ill. It is a matter of time before we all die. Aging and death remain almost a ... - Sam Vaknin, Ph.D.
 

Adult Continuing Education is Healthy for You

You can't teach an old dog new tricks? Nonsense. Adults have many learning advantages over younger p ... - Ian McAllister
 
 

Four Keys to Finding a Red Hot Audience That'll Rush to Buy Your Books

Did you know that when you're looking for a hot topic to write about or a hungry market to go after, ... - Sanyika Calloway-Boyce
 

The Many Uses Of Training Videos

Every new employee needs some type of training, and most employees benefit from ongoing training and ... - Bob Hett
 

The Fabric of Life or What Material Should I Use To Make That Dress With?

There are many different types of fabrics, and many different ideas and crafts to do with them. For ... - Mike Yeager
 

Spray on Dirt for Camouflage

Super sticky spray on dirt or mud simulation coating or wash-off-able paint is needed to protect our ... - Lance Winslow
 

Pharmacy Certification Online

Pharmacy Certification can be obtained through an online school or distance learning program. Pharma ... - Michael Bustamante
 
 
   Main Page -> Privacy -> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.bandcool.com