Quick tips from the Faculty Teaching Institute about how to create effective and inclusive presentations. Presentation has its place and is a valuable tool, when done sparingly and for the right type of content.
Keep it short and pause. Lecture no more than ~10-15 minutes, and then turn to active learning. Pause frequently to give students a chance to think about what you’ve presented, identify questions, take notes, draw connections, or think about the next step.
Engage students with the content you're telling them about through strategies like choral response, individual work like quick writes, or group work like neighbor discussions or think-pair-share.
Provide guided or skeleton notes. These notes provide some level of organization but lack details, which students fill in, helping them to become better note-takers and consumers of information. You might start with your full lecture notes or slides, and keep things like equations or charts, and leave out detailed discussion or answers. Or simply provide headings, equations and diagrams, leaving the rest blank. Cornell Notes are another option to offer students.
Provide slides, recordings, and screencasts so that students can review the presentation again. When solving problems, record a separate screencast that students can re-watch and pause.
Use supportive and encouraging language to establish a good class climate and boost student confidence. Emphasize hard work over ability so that students develop a growth mindset. Examples (from Seidel et al. 2015):
Additional practices:
This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grants DUE-2141678, 2141745, 2141769, 2141795, and 2142045. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.