Whether you give presentations for a living or attend them only at seminars, you've probably sat through hours of digital slides and scenarios, overhead-projector transparencies and bullet points.
In The Overhead Projector: Don’t Overlook It (Part 1), I explained why it’s better to use a projector (be it an old-fashioned overhead or LCD) than to write on the board. Now we turn to how to use a ...
Whether you prepare support materials for in-house or client presentations in Microsoft PowerPoint or pull together the equivalent of PowerPoint slides from a variety of applications, you want a ...
Thanks to tools like short throw projectors, students can collaborate together in any size room, anywhere in the classroom. Apps like Epson’s iProjection allow teachers to let their students connect ...
Apparently, there’s some sort of sporting event being televised this weekend that has been historically used as an excuse to buy a big-screen TV. [Joel] wanted a huge-screen TV on the cheap, so he ...
On the third floor of Folsom Stadium in a sparsely furnished storage room, 100 or so clunky gray boxes with glass tops sit on the floor, some haphazardly stacked on top of each other. This is where ...
A key to keeping students on task is closing their window of opportunity to get off task. And never is that window more wide open than when you turn your back to write on the board. Case in point, my ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results