HUMU 250 Week 4 | Assignment Help | Brandman University

HUMU 250 Week 4 | Assignment Help | Brandman University

Week 4 - Mini-Multimedia Presentation

Attached Files:

·         File Mini-Presentation Assignment.pdf Mini-Presentation Assignment.pdf - Alternative Formats (47.372 KB)

·         File Mini-Presentation Rubric.pdf Mini-Presentation Rubric.pdf - Alternative Formats (67.053 KB)

HUMU-250: Mini-Presentation Assignment

 

The point of the mini-presentation is to give you some time to figure out the basics of your argument, iron out technology issues, and otherwise prepare for the final multimedia presentation. The full draft of the final presentation is due at the very end of Week Six, the final copy is due at the end of Week Seven.

The mini-presentation assignment requires that you complete the first two slides of your final presentation, complete with automatic forwarding, graphics, and narration.

You should present your introduction and thesis statement within these two slides. If you do this correctly, it should be clear what you are going to claim and how you plan to support that claim. (You don’t actually have to provide evidence for your claim yet, but you will for the full presentation). These may change as you work on your final presentation—that’s not unusual.

Professional presenters try to keep to twenty seconds of audio per slide—try to stay under a minute of narration for this assignment. Know, too, that you may have to revise these slides significantly before you turn in the final presentation.

The first slides in the full presentation will set the tone for the entire assignment. So spend a lot of time getting them right—it will set you up for success as you move on to the “meat” of the presentation. Your instructor will offer feedback on where the argument seems to be going—if that doesn’t match what you intended, you have some revision to do.

You will be evaluated on the introduction and thesis, your use of the technology, the content and sound of your narration (audio), and the mechanics (errors in punctuation and grammar).

See the Mini-Presentation Rubric for details.

The final presentation assignment is posted in “Readings and Preparation” this week within the lecture—read it and be sure to ask any questions you may have of your instructor before you begin to work on your slides.

HUMU-250: Mini-Presentation Assignment

The point of the mini-presentation is to give you some time to figure out the basics of your argument, iron out technology issues, and otherwise prepare for the final multimedia presentation. The full draft of the final presentation is due at the very end of Week Six, the final copy is due at the end of Week Seven.

The mini-presentation assignment requires that you complete the first two slides of your final presentation, complete with automatic forwarding, graphics, and narration.

You should present your introduction and thesis statement within these two slides. If you do this correctly, it should be clear what you are going to claim and how you plan to support that claim. (You don’t actually have to provide evidence for your claim yet, but you will for the full presentation). These may change as you work on your final presentation—that’s not unusual.

Professional presenters try to keep to twenty seconds of audio per slide—try to stay under a minute of narration for this assignment. Know, too, that you may have to revise these slides significantly before you turn in the final presentation. 

The first slides in the full presentation will set the tone for the entire assignment. So spend a lot of time getting them right—it will set you up for success as you move on to the “meat” of the presentation. Your instructor will offer feedback on where the argument seems to be going—if that doesn’t match what you intended, you have some revision to do.

You will be evaluated on the introduction and thesis, your use of the technology, the content and sound of your narration (audio), and the mechanics (errors in punctuation and grammar). See the Mini-Presentation Rubric for details.

The final presentation assignment is posted in “Readings and Preparation” this week—read it and be sure to ask any questions you may have of your instructor before you begin to work on your slides.

 


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