7.3 Final Presentation Directions
As a capstone to the work you've done this term, you'll present your final argument both as a completed paper (at least 4 pages plus a Works Cited page) and in another method. This will allow your viewers/readers to interact with your materials in a visual or auditory manner. You may select any method from the list below to present your research; if there's another means that you're comfortable presenting in, please let me know. I am open to suggestion!
- Video (either a screencast, a video production, or a short collage)
- Podcast or short audio piece
- Photo/image collage or Infographic
- Narrated slideshow
- Comic strip or animation
The presentation should take the equivalent of 5 to 7 minutes to view, read, or listen to. I'll grade based on three criteria:
- Presentation of argument (60%):
- Describe the research question you wanted to answer in pursuing this topic
- Describe your claim/thesis (the answer to this question)
- Describe one or two major pieces of evidence
- Describe any challenges you faced when researching this argument
- Describe anything you learned or anything that surprised you during this process.
- Creativity/Design (20%):
- Chosen method is engaging for viewers
- Presentation is clear and thougtful
- Formatting (20%)
- Presentation is 5-7 minutes in length (or the equivalent in viewing time for collages, i.e., 15-20 images)
- Presentation includes your name, class, and a descriptive title (see note at end)
- Presentation is posted as directed, meeting all deadlines
- Presentation includes something beyond written words
There are a plethora of recommended applications you can use to create this presentation. Here are a few that I have some experience with and can recommend; however, if you've used an application before that's not on this list, please feel free to work with it instead!
- Videos: Screencast-o-Matic and Jing are both free downloads that would allow you to make a recording of your screen or of yourself if you have a webcam. For example, if you create a PowerPoint slideshow and want to record yourself talking while you flip through the slides, Screencast-O-Matic would work well for this.
- Audio: Audacity is a free audio recorder download, though it is also very powerful and can take a while to learn. If you have a smartphone, you might also explore apps available for voice recording there, too.
- Visuals: VoiceThread is a great resource where you can upload a slide show and record audio over each slide. It also allows viewers to leave comments (in writing or audio).
- Infographics and Collages: Canva and Piktograph offer easy drag-and-drop Infographic creators.
- Cartoons and Animations: Powtoon is a reliably useful animation maker. Pixton allows online comic strip creation. (You can also draw by hand and scan or photograph your work for presentation).
Deadline: Presentations should be submitted to the Week 10 Presentation Forum by the end of Week 10 (Sunday night at 11:55 p.m.).