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Using Powerpoint Presentations In A Language Classroom |
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Submitted by Socorro Beard
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Using PowerPoint Presentations in a Language Classroom
If you teach in a language classroom (ESL or any other language really), eventually you will ask your students to do an in-class presentation. Presentations are a great way for students to showcase their abilities and gain confidence using their new language in a stressful yet safe environment.
In most situations, the purpose of asking a language student prepare and perform a presentation is so that they can demonstrate their abilities to:
choose their topics
generate ideas by brainstorming
then logically organize and show they can
make sensible relationships between them
use intelligible English in front of an audience
all within a specific time frame
These are all very important skills, for a language learner who intended to peruse a career in business or in academics. For most language students just being able to accomplish these tasks in a new language is a great feat in itself forget about complicating the process with posters and software like PowerPoint.
However, after nearly 15 years of teaching, I have found that the first thing students want to do is use PowerPoint. I think in most cases they feel that they will be more impressive. Regardless of the reasons, when students decide to use a software tool like PowerPoint, their focus changes from preparing a good presentation towards building the slides. As a result many problems crop up. Some of the most common traps you will see students falling into include:
Including more text than needed
Adding in distracting sliding visuals and sounds
not practicing enough (because they use the slides as a crutch)
reading slides word for word
looking at the screen more than the audience
having compatibility issues with the software
What so often ends up happening is that the technology gets in the way of the student putting on a decent presentation. Now Im not blaming the technology here, the problem comes from lack of experience with both the technology and also with giving presentations. These problems are not limited to language learners by any means. Native English speakers who arent very experienced have very similar issues as well. However they can become a very bad combination for a language learner who is also trying to cope with language problems.
Regardless of whether you are a language student, or a native language speaker, you really want to avoid:
1. handing out the slides on paper, then
2. putting the same slides up for the audience to read and then
3. reading the slides out loud as your presentation.
This would simply be a waste of everyones time.
So should language learners use PowerPoint as a tool for giving presentations? Well I think the answer to that is a qualified yes. Before they do, they need to be reasonably comfortable with the language they are studying. Then they need to have some instruction/guidance in developing content and presenting it with PowerPoint. Once theyve had that, they will be more capable of controlling the technology instead of being controlled by it.
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