Many people ask what is a post or page slug? At WordPress.org you will find a great definition.
A slug is a few words that describe a post or a page. Slugs are usually a URL friendly version of the post title (which has been automatically generated by WordPress), but a slug can be anything you like. Slugs are meant to be used with permalinks as they help describe what the content at the URL is. Example post permalink:http://wordpress.org/development/2006/06/wordpress-203/
Scott’s presentation guru, Garr Reynolds, stated it best at his site, presentationzen.com: “We are a storytelling animal. We are not a bullet-point-memorizing animal. We are wired to be attracted to story and to learn from them and to spread them.”“The best stories infuse wonder,” says Pixar’s Andrew Stanton. Come learn how to tell better stories, engage and not enrage your students. (New and improved distance learning edition!)
Imagine a widely used and expensive prescription drug that promised to make us beautiful but didn’t. Instead the drug had frequent, serious side effects: It induced stupidity, turned everyone into bores, wasted time, and degraded the quality and credibility of communication. These side effects would rightly lead to a worldwide product recall.
Students take the initiative to improve the lesson by (1) modifying a learning task to make it more meaningful or relevant to their needs, (2) suggesting modifications to the grouping patterns used, and/or (3) suggesting modifications or additions to the materials being used.
Students have an opportunity for reflection and closure on the lesson to consolidate their understanding.
Students are asked to write an essay in the style of Hemmingway and to describe which aspects of his style they have incorporated.
Students determine which of several tools—e.g., a protractor, spreadsheet, or graphing calculator—would be most suitable to solve a math problem.
A student asks whether they might remain in their small groups to complete another section of the activity, rather than work independently.
Students identify or create their own learning materials.
Students summarize their learning from the lesson.
Play Bingo – sort of…
Creative Commons TPEP Bingo Card created by Scott Le Duc
Playing bingo with standards is a great way to activate the gaming mentality in students/teachers – get them looking, searching in your curriculum – doing is learning!
Endure Scott Le Duc’s Introduction
Decide whether he is credibleor not
Started teaching CTE Arts and Technology in 1996 at Capital High School in Olympia, WA
Achieved and maintained National Board Certification in CTE (since 2014)
Selected as one of the top presenters at numerous CTE conferences
LIST the stages and procedures used in the recording process. APPROACHING STANDARD
DESCRIBE the stages and procedures used in the recording process. MEETS STANDARD
DEMONSTRATEthe stages and procedures used in the recording process. EXCEEDS STANDARD
Example of a Bloom verbs-based rubric where the ‘standard verb’ was ‘describe’ with the lower level verb was ‘list’ and higher level verb was ‘demonstrate’
Contemplate That The Brain Can Only Absorb What The Butt Can Endure
CC image by Scott Le Duc
Contact Scott for Information, Resources, and Training
PROMPT: You are a professional presenter and educator. You are presenting at a CTE conference and presenting how to create presentations that better connect with high school career and technical education students. The audience is career and tech teachers who want to communicate more effectively through presentations. Use the resources in this notebook to create a short bulleted list of material to answer the questions that are included below from the survey responses of conference session attendees. Here are the poll results…
Poll Results:18 Answers Budget updates Increased student engagement Prompt writing District limitations on access to AI even for the AI classroom Using various AI tools in the classroom when Microsoft Copilot is the only approved IT option. The quickest ways to make presentations that are engaging and easily digestible for students. using and identifying the use of AI in the classroom The effective use of AI for students and teachers I think the title addresses the concern… most AI created presentations are super boring!! How to get automatic “check for understanding” on slides and throughout the slideshow. Changes in industry standard and Ospi expectations How much should we and students us AI? Ways to incorporate the industries into the classrooms better. Writing a grant and succeed on acquiring it for our students. Practical skills to implement Just a huge fan of the original session and looking forward to how AI is implemented 🙂 CTE plan 1 pathway
NotebookLM’s Results
Good morning, fellow educators! It’s great to be here at the CTE conference, focused on empowering our presentations to truly connect with high school career and technical education students. Your survey responses have given us a clear roadmap for what you want to learn, especially how to make presentations more engaging and effective for your students.
Here’s a bulleted list of material addressing your survey responses, drawing from the provided sources:
Making Presentations Engaging and Easily Digestible for Students (Combating “Boring AI-Created Presentations”)
The goal is to create presentations that “don’t suck” by ensuring they are engaging and easily digestible, which is key to countering the concern that “most AI created presentations are super boring!!” [1, Survey]. Remember, “We are a storytelling animal. We are not a bullet-point-memorizing animal. We are wired to be attracted to story and to learn from them and to spread them”.
• Embrace Storytelling:
◦ Storytelling matters! It engages students and “infuses wonder”1. Stories increase drama and help with engagement.
◦ Zoom into the moment: The best stories don’t just summarize events; they take listeners “into the trenches” and make them “part of that physical moment”.
◦ Incorporate Five Storytelling Techniques to create immersive narratives:
▪ Location: Start by stating where you are physically (e.g., “2 weeks ago I was sitting on my couch in my living room”). This helps the audience visualize the scene without needing excessive detail.
▪ Actions: Describe what you are doing in that specific moment to bring in “forward momentum”.
▪ Thoughts: Share your hopes, dreams, fears, or worries from crucial moments. Make these thoughts sound raw and unfiltered for relatability.
▪ Emotions:Show emotions through body language or facial expressions rather than just stating them (e.g., “in that moment I lean backward and let out this big sigh” instead of “I was relieved”).
▪ Dialogue: Use the exact words characters spoke in crucial moments to make the story more interesting and “juicy”.
• Audience-Centered Approach:
◦ Put the audience first. Your story, if approached correctly, should resonate as “their story” because its theme is universal, even if the plot is unique to you.
◦ “Make me care.” As Andrew Stanton of Pixar states, you must make the audience care, “emotionally, intellectually, aesthetically”.
◦ Consider Cognitive Load Theory: The human mind has limitations in short-term memory (holding approximately seven pieces of information). This emphasizes the need for conciseness and “chunking” information7. The “Do My Slides Suck” test includes questions like, “Do you have more than 12-15 words on a slide?” and “Do your slides add little or no new info beyond what you can say in words?”.
• Effective Planning and Design (The “How?”):
◦ Start Analog, Then Digital:Turn off the computer during the preparation stage. Use paper, Post-it Notes, or whiteboards to brainstorm and get ideas down before moving to technology.
◦ Brainstorm and Brainwrite (Right Brain): Generate ideas freely.
◦ Draft a Paper Storyboard (Left Brain): Create a mock-up of your slides by folding paper into 16 sections to draw and write out the flow of your presentation, focusing on visuals or key text hooks.
◦ Pitch the Storyboard: Practice your content and delivery by pitching your draft to others.
◦ Slide Design Principles:
▪ Choose a black background for your master slide template, as “darks appear further away,” helping you “own ‘the presentation wall'”.
▪ Use white font for maximum contrast with a dark background. Avoid arbitrary color changes.
▪ Avoid visual distractions: Ornate 3D charts, graphs, and complex templates can distract from your message.
▪ Do NOT “talk to your slides” or read them word for word, as this kills audience interest. Your slides should add new information, not just repeat your words.
◦ Emotional Connection: “We are emotional creatures. Use this in your presentation”. Presentations should not be “emotionally empty”. Make your audience feel something to ensure they remember your message…. Being authentic and vulnerable can help achieve this.
◦ Structure and Clarity: Have a solid architectural structure (beginning, middle, end; or ideal world vs. actual world/problem/solution)…. Have a clear theme or message.
◦ Remove the Nonessential: Follow Chekhov’s gun principle: “Remove everything that has no relevance to the story”.
◦ Show Conflict and Change: Present a clear conflict (character struggles to overcome obstacles to reach a goal) and demonstrate a clear change (e.g., before/after visuals)….
◦ Do Something Unexpected: Incorporate unexpected elements to make your ideas stick and capture attention….
How to Get Automatic “Check for Understanding”
• Use Kahoot.it: After your presentation, use Kahoot.it to quiz students on the content. This is an excellent tool for formative assessment to determine what students have retained and to inform your future content and process. You can also have students create their own Kahoots for their presentations.
Practical Skills to Implement
The workshop includes practical stages to help build these skills:
• The Planning Stage: Includes brainstorming, brainwriting, exploring ideas to jumpstart generation, and drafting a paper storyboard.
• The Building Stage: Covers creating a slide list/script, designing a PowerPoint Master Slide Template (choosing colors, fonts), placing text in the slide outline, discussing copyright and Creative Commons, and gathering and citing images from sources like Flickr.com. Publishing slideshows to platforms like Slideshare.net or VoiceThread.com is also a practical skill.
• The Presentation Stage: Focuses on delivery, including how to present with “power and poise” and avoiding common mistakes like saying things that detract from the presentation. Using VoiceThread.com or Screencastify to record narration with slides is also mentioned.
Ways to Incorporate Industries into the Classrooms Better
• Focus on 21st Century Skills: Emphasize the importance of 21st Century Skills for the “world of work”. Gather ideas for integrating these skills through students collaboratively building and presenting. Resources for 21st Century Learning Frameworks and essential skills are available.
• “Show, Don’t Tell”: Students and teachers need to be able to “show, don’t tell” in their communication, which is crucial for standing out in the professional world.
• Bio and Portfolio Requirements: Teach students that “The Resume is Dead, The Bio is King,” and how to craft a professional bio addressing questions like “Who am I?” and “How can I help you?”.
• Social Media Literacy: Equip students with necessary social media literacy, including understanding platforms like LinkedIn.com and the recommendations process. This is a required skill for the modern workplace.
While the workshop title is “AI Empowered Presentations That Don’t Suck,” the focus of the provided material is on the timeless principles of effective presentation and storytelling that make any presentation, regardless of the tools used, more engaging and impactful. Applying these principles ensures that your AI-generated content or design choices enhance, rather than detract from, your message and connection with students.
Useful, accessible, customizable, and freely available, Ubuntu is the most popular Linux variant on the planet. Ubuntu Live is being launched to provide a meeting place for Ubuntu users, contributors, and partners–and the Ubuntu-curious. Learn how Ubuntu can make a critical difference in your business or project and engage with the global open source community at the largest Ubuntu gathering yet.
Keynotes
Mark Shuttleworth
I participated and presented at the Ubuntu Live Conference today. The keynote was delivered by Mark Shuttleworth. In 1994, Mark founded Ubuntu based on the Linux operating system platform. He is also behind the launchpad.net collaborative tool for software developers.
Stephen O’Grady
Stephen O’Grady is Principal Analyst at RedMonk, “the first analyst firm built on open source.” His speech about Ubuntu and tapping into the communities of developers to build cool projects and compete by developing online applications, like Goggle, WordPress, Facebook, etc.
Jeff Waugh
Jeff Waugh is a consultant with Gnome/Waugh Partners. He has worked with Ubuntu since 2004. He is a principle evangelist for Ubuntu and Gnome. He used a Wiimote to run his slideshow. It was very funny. He took us on a journey through time to reveal how new ideas have been met with resistance.
Education
Edubuntu
I am very excited about the education component of Ubuntu project titled Edubuntu. Open Source software is developed collaboratively and is free to all users. There are tremendous possibilities for schools.