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Written by Cynthia Thomas and Dr. Frank B. Flanders Georgia CTAE Resource Network 2010 Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

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Written by Cynthia Thomas and Dr. Frank B. Flanders Georgia CTAE Resource Network 2010. Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations. Objective. Students will be able to explain 10 guidelines for preparing effective PowerPoint presentations. Is this how you want the audience to look?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Written by Cynthia Thomas and Dr. Frank B. Flanders

Georgia CTAE Resource Network2010

Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Page 2: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Objective

• Students will be able to explain 10 guidelines for preparing effective PowerPoint presentations.

Page 3: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Is this how you want the audience to look?

Of course not!

Follow the guidelines (Rules of Thumb) to help prepare informative and interesting presentations.

Page 4: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

What is a Rule of Thumb?

• A guide that is not intended to be strictly accurate or reliable for every situation.

Note: “Rule of Thumb” originated with carpenters who used their thumb to estimate measurement.

Page 5: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #1

• Organize! – Presentations should be well organized.

Page 6: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #1 Continued…

Your presentation should generally consist of Title Slide Objectives: state what you want your

audience to learn Body: the content of your message Summary: a shortened version of the

message

Page 7: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #2• Use large legible fonts. • Generally 24+ for text & 32+ for Headers

FONT SIZE Can you read this well? (11pt)

How about this? (16pt)

And now? (24pt)

And now? (36pt)

Page 8: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #2 Continued…

• Some audience members may be sitting several yards

away from the screen. Don’t make them squint!

• Arial, Tahoma, Times New Roman, & Verdana are easy to read and compatible with most computers.

Page 9: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #3

• Be consistent – use the same colors and fonts throughout.

Page 10: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #4• Minimize text on slides. • Generally, only 6 lines with 6 words

per line for each slide

Don’t just read to your audience!

Page 11: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #4 Continued• Keep your audience alert!!!

• Do not put everything you plan to say in your presentation or your audience may just hear…

“blah, blah, blah…”

Page 12: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #4 Continued…

• The slides should summarize main points.• If you need detailed notes for your presentation,

use the “speaker notes” section at the bottom of each PowerPoint slide.

Page 13: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #5• Use appropriate designs and complementary colors.• Generally no more than three colors on one slide.• Be careful with photo backgrounds as often text can

become illegible as the colors change.

Page 14: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #6

• Use animations and sounds sparingly and with care.

• Animated pictures may seem cool but can distract your audience and detract from the presentation’s professionalism.

Page 15: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #6 Continued…

• Pretty Cool, Huh!• Not distracting at all!• Do you even know what the

presenter just said?

Page 16: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #7• Use images to add interest. • Make sure that images are appropriate, and

that they help convey the message.

Page 17: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #7 Continued…

•This slide is to show that English Bulldogs can be intimidating to strangers and are great guard dogs.

•Is this image representative of the message?

Page 18: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #8• Check and then double check for

grammatical and spelling errors.

Page 19: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #8 Continued• You slide presentaion is finishd! The colors look

great, the slide design is profesional and appropriat for your topic.. You have some colorfull, pictures that add just the right amount of pizaz!!!

• Now it is time to go present it! It is gonna be incredble!!!! The audeience is going to be blone away!

Did you see the mistakes?They are revealed on the next slide.

Page 20: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #8 Continued• Your slide presentaion is finishd! The colors

look great, the slide design is profesional and appropriat for your topic.. You have some colorfull, pictures that add just the right amount of pizaz!!!

• Now it is time to go present it! It is gonna be incredble!!!! The audeience is going to be blone away!

Page 21: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #9• Use charts and graphs as visuals for data. • Charts and graphs can be great tools to

organize data. • Make sure they are accurate and easy for

the audience to read.• Excel is a great tool for creating charts

and graphs!

Page 22: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Charts & graphs should show information in an easy to understand and representative manner.

Are these easy to understand?Which is more useful for understanding the data?

Rule of Thumb #9 Continued…

Page 23: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Rule of Thumb #10

• Keep it simple.

• Your presentation should not be a display of every feature of PowerPoint.

Page 24: Guidelines for Effective PowerPoint Presentations

Summary• Remember, your

presentation is about your topic, not the slide show!

• Your audience should remember the things you said, not “how cool” your slide show was!