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Presentations

This page includes examples of Web-enabled presentations by

teachers: students:

TopCultural Studies

Module 2: What is Culture

Terry Dugas, IDS 3305 (Issues in Media, Literature, and the Arts), Florida Gulf Coast University

This three-part audiovisual presentation, comprised of What is Culture?, Developing a Common Culture, and The Functions and Effects of Culture, provides a framing introduction to a course on culture. Students may listen to the presentations or read transcripts and study the images, then go on to complete related assignments that ask them to develop their own notions of cultural experience. The aim is to get students to understand key questions about culture and then apply and evaluate those questions in their own cultural experience.

Dugas's combination of audio and visual media suggests how the Web can be utilized to convey key issues and questions in a way that both frames discussion and involves students in formulating their own questions.

This example uses streaming media, images, and text.


TopGeneral Science

Module 2 Commentary: The Tools of Astronomy

Matt Bobrowsky and Chris Hunt, General Science 125 (Universe: The Infinite Frontier), University of Maryland University College

This online presentation explains electromagnetic radiation, spectra, optical telescopes, and the special theory of relativity. The presentation is intended to supplement textbook materials; in extending the textbook, however, it uses a variety of Web-based media to bring content to life. Light waves and wavelengths are illustrated by means of animation. Images of different kinds of spectra are shown. Students are referred to relevant Web sites for information on the origins of the telescope and on the advances in astronomy made possible by the Hubble Telescope.

This presentation shows how the Web and Web-based media can enhance instructional content by demonstrating concepts under discussion and by broadening the range of relevant information available to students.

This example features the use of animated graphics, images, text, and Web sites.


TopEconomics

Economics 200 Lectures

Gene Mumy, Economics 200 (Principles of Microeconomics), Department of Economics, Ohio State University

This page contains 17 lecture frameworks derived from the basic template of the PowerPoint lectures accompanying Michael Parkins's Microeconomics, 4th edition (Addison-Wesley Longman, 1998, all rights reserved), and delivered over the course of a semester. The lectures are a component of Professor Mumy's course, and represent a delivery method in broad use across the disciplines for presenting this kind of information.

So long as students have PowerPoint on their computers they can download these lectures through their Web browsers. Presentation of information as PowerPoint slides enhances the traditional delivery of lectures. Key information is supplemented with visuals providing points of access to questions posed by the course; because all lectures are in electronic format, their details can be rearranged, revised, and extended on an ongoing basis.

This example features the use PowerPoint.


TopComputer Art

Creative Design for the World Wide Web

Bonnie Mitchell, Art 495/586 (Creative Design Using Flash), Computer Art Department, School of Art, Bowling Green State University

The syllabus for Professor Mitchell's course includes a final project assignment that asks students to create a three-page site using Macromedia Flash, a vector-based graphics program that enables users to create dynamic pages and animations for the Web. The assignment is intended to give art students practical training in using multimedia tools and to gain proficiency with key design elements such as animation, composition, color, layout, and interaction.

The student projects for this course show students learning skills that will be essential to success in their profession. Web sites created with Flash have broader possibilities than static pages created with HTML editors. Some of these possibilities are clearly visible in the student sites. Lee Thompson's site, for instance, demonstrates the graphic design capabilities of an instructional media unit at Bowling Green State University; given the site's subject it is an especially appropriate use of the technology. Scott Bazzle's animation creates a "digital business card" that assembles portfolio, resume, and contact information on the same page; what better way to advertise one's skill as a web professional?

The student projects in Professor Mitchell's course represent a Web technology that is certainly popular in art and design education, but has also spread to cartography, architecture, and other fields that require features such as projections, scaling, and spatialization.

This example uses animation and authoring programs.


TopMedia Studies

Visual Culture Project

Ellen Schattschneider, IDS 116 (Visual Culture), Emory's Center for Interactive Teaching (ECIT), Emory University

This course introduces students to the treatment of vision and visual media in the humanities and the interpretative social sciences. Working in small groups, students are asked to develop Web project essays exploring different aspects of visual culture. The essays must be composed of at least two hyperlinked Web pages on one of the following assigned topics: the body in the image, monster pictures, or sacred images. Students are required to use at least three images and no more than 10 in their projects, and the images must be incorporated directly into the body of their paper, with a detailed discussion of each.

The student groups in this course each created visual culture Web sites; in addition, six students used a program called Cinepak to develop short documentary videos. There was clearly an extensive amount of work involved in creating these projects, but the hands-on experience of working with media to address visual culture issues undoubtedly provided a valuable learning process and encouraged students to not just merely present their perspectives but also take an active part in authoring their own knowledge.

This example uses text, images, and downloaded media.


TopSociology

Group Profile Web Pages

Jeffrey K. Hadden, Soc 257 (New Religious Movements), Sociology Department, University of Virginia

The Religious Movements Homepage, directed by Jeffrey K. Hadden, is an ongoing project providing comprehensive Web-based and print resources on cults, sects, new religions, and religious movements—both new and established. The religious movement profiles reviewed here were developed over several semesters as term projects for Hadden's New Religious Movements classes. There are over 200 profiles of religious groups and movements to date; each consists of, at a minumum, basic information to help orient the reader to the group, links to Web sites containing further useful information, and a bibliography of print resources.

The collected profiles, which constitute an outstanding resource, provide a wonderful model of students using the Web to conduct rigorous and substantive research. The profiles also clearly show students invested in their work and taking the time to present comprehensive information about the groups they chose. Hadden's overseeing of his students' work should not be ignored either; his Benchmarks for Web Site Development (explained under "Term Project: Web Page Development" in the course requirements) provides detailed and helpful guidance on the steps students should follow to complete their term project requirement.

This example suggests that effective teachers can use the encyclopedic nature of the Web to encourage students to own their knowledge and to develop expertise in getting others to take that knowledge seriously.

This example uses text and Web sites.


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