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Making Terrible PowerPoint Presentations

12/21/2015

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I make no secret of the fact that the core of most of my lessons are stolen from Jon Corippo.  His overall philosophy is teaching like a football coach: lots of repetitions at game speed, tons of feedback, and pushing for mastery.

One of the best is called Bad PowerPoint.  It starts with stand-up comedy, and ends with students presenting truly terrible slide decks using truly terrible presentation technique, with classmates scoring them collaboratively using BINGO boards.

So often we require students to give presentations without first teaching them how to do it well. At best, we lecture them about what good presentations are, often in ways that violate those elements of good presentations!

But, as my first mentor in the teaching profession reminded me often, there is a big difference between “teaching” and “telling” students.  ​

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Why I Won't Tell My Students the Answer

12/15/2015

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Today in class, a student brought a tripod up to me to ask how to attach it to a camera.  I said, “I bet you can figure it out. Here’s one hint: there’s a piece that comes off.”

He sighed a little in exasperation, but sure enough, he played around with the buttons and settings and discovered that he could, indeed, figure it out.

When I was in high school, if I wanted to know something, I either had to look it up in a book, or ask a teacher.  Both of those things required being in a specific place at a specific time, and if I wanted to know something when I wasn’t in that place at that time, I was out of luck.

Today, students have more information at their fingertips than anyone has in the entire history of the world.

And they still ask questions for which answers are easily searchable on the Google machine.

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    A completely incomplete record of three years spent flipping my high school English classes with my cross-country collaborative partner, Andrew Thomasson. But after a decade in high school, I made the switch to a new gig: flipping English and History for 6th graders in Tiburon, CA.

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