View Notes - How To Set Up A Pecha Kucha(4) from COMM 395 at University of British Columbia. How To Set Up A PechaKucha Presentation in PowerPoint COMM 395 Business Communications PechaKucha has a. May 10, 2012 In Japanese, Pecha Kucha translates to chit-chat or chatter. On this page, we will explore the ten best Pecha Kucha tips. See Also: Ten Easy Topics for Pecha Kucha. Each Pecha Kucha speaker presents with a deck of 20 slides (or images) each. Each of these slides progresses automatically to the next one, after being visible onscreen for 20 seconds. Nov 11, 2017 This video shows you how to make a pecha kucha with PowerPoint 2016 for Windows PCs. It includes how to set the timing, how to record in PowerPoint, and how. Creating a Pecha Kucha Presentation Using Keynote Open Keynote, File- New; Choose a theme, a Photo Essay is recommended. With the first slide selected, hit Return to create 19 more slides. Command + A to select all the 20 slides. Pecha Kucha (actually pronounced as peh-cha ku-cha) is a special style of presentation featuring a short but powerful message to an audience. This style of presentation is not new, and speakers are practicing it for years. The 20 slides in 20 seconds each slide is a special format that differs from other presentation styles.
A Pecha Kucha presentation is a simple presentation where you show 20 images or slides, each for 20 seconds (i.e. 20x20). The slides/images will advance automatically to keep you on time. So the total presentation is 6 minutes 40 seconds long.
Creating a Pecha Kucha Presentation Using PowerPoint
Open PowerPoint, File -> New; Home -> Layout -> Title and Content/Blank;
With the first slide selected, hit Return to create 19 more slides;
Command + A on a Mac or Control + A on a PC to select all the 20 slides, Transitions -> uncheck the box of On Mouse Click, check the box of After, then put 20 seconds; This will enable the slides advance automatically in 20 seconds.
Then go through each slide, to add images and/or text;
When finished, like a regular slide show, go to Slide Show -> Play from start.
A PowerPoint template for Pecha Kucha presentation is available to download here DMC-PechaKucha-presentation-template.pptx.
Creating a Pecha Kucha Presentation Using Keynote
Open Keynote, File-> New; Choose a theme, a Photo Essay is recommended.
With the first slide selected, hit Return to create 19 more slides.
Command + A to select all the 20 slides. Animate-> Start Transition -> change it fro On Click to Automatically - Delay 20.00 S. This will This will enable the slides advance automatically in 20 seconds.
Then go through each slide, to add images and/or text;
When finished, like a regular slide show, go to Play -> Play Slideshow.
A Keynote template for Pecha Kucha presentation is available to download here DMC-PechaKucha-presentation-template.key.zip.
Note: Google Presentation doesn't have 20 seconds option to automatically advance the slides. File -> Publish to the web; auto - advance slides, (1,2,3,5,10,15,30 seconds, 1 minute).
Tips and Tricks
Checking image resolution This is to help prevent pixel artifact from displaying. From left to right, low resolution image 100x67, image after more pixels added in 1200x800, original high resolution image 1200x800.
If an image is in a very low resolution, it may look pixelated when it is projected to a big screen or printed large.
Upscaling images by adding in more pixels will reduce/minimize pixel artifacts. This interpolation process increases pixel count. However, it can't increase the amount of details. If the detail was never captured it can't be replaced. The results of upscaling images are nothing like what you'd get with an image that was higher resolution to start with.
On Mac, open the image with Preview, Tools -> Adjust Size...
On PC, open the image with Paint, Home -> Resize...
Increase the image resolution to match the projecting device's resolution. For instance, DMC's projector has a resolution of 1024x768; DMC's multipurpose room's big screen has a resolution of 1920x1080.
Placing an image onto a slide
Have a placeholder on the slide. A placeholder is much like a picture frame, which gives you more flexibility when manipulating images.
Drag an image into the placeholder; or have the placeholder selected, then copy and paste an image into it.
Adjust the placeholder border (i.e. the black bracket) to cover the whole slide
Crop picture to fill placeholder if important content won't be lost with cropping
Resize picture to fit inside placeholder otherwise.
Using placeholder to crop images
A placeholder can be duplicated when it is empty.
After an image is placed inside the placeholder, only the image will be copied when you use copy function. The placeholder won't be copied.
Removing the background from an image This helps to bring focus to the key part of the image and makes the text and image look more integrated.
Double click an image on a slide
Format Picture -> Remove Background
Drag the rectangle to make it cover all the foreground. The background is shaded with Magenta color.
Draw lines within the areas that you want to include or exclude from the background image.
Click Remove Background
Fading an image into a solid color This allows you to blend your image into a solid color or background color to highlight text or to bring focus to the key part of the image.
Home -> Insert -> Shape, choose rectangle
Draw a rectangle
Fill -> Fill Effects..., Fill -> Gradient. Choose the direction of the gradient fill.
Next, select the two gradient colors. Click to select the left gradient bucket, from the Color drop down menu, choose More Colors...., choose the Magnifying glass to sample a color on the image. Set the transparency to 100%, which will make the rectangle blended seamlessly to the image.
Click to select the right gradient bucket, from the Color drop down menu, choose More Colors...., choose the Magnifying glass to sample a color on the image. Set the transparency to 0%, which will make the rectangle have solid color at one end.
Creating masks to highlight key areas in an image Semi-transparent mask enables you to highlight a section on an image.
Home -> Shape -> Rectangles, select the Rectangle shape, draw it to cover the whole image, Fill -> Fill Effects..., Fill -> Solid, choose a solid color and adjust transparency to about 50%, then click OK to apply.
Home -> Shape -> Basic Shapes, select the Circle shape, draw it around the area you want to highlight, Fill -> black or a different color then what you choose above. Click the oval you just draw, Arrange -> Bring to Front
Select the oval and the semi-transparent rectangle, right click over, Save as picture..., save it as a PNG file since PNG file can preserve transparency setting.
Delete the oval and the semi-transparent rectangle, then drag the saved PNG file over the image, Recolor -> Set Transparent Color, click the black oval. Then you should see the After effect.
Borrowing nice color combinations from PowerPoint's built-in theme
Themes -> Colors, the eight colors that you see next to the theme name represent one light background/text color, one dark background/text color, and the six accent colors for that theme.
There are visibility rules built into the theme so that you can switch colors at any time and all your content will remain legible and still look good.
Theme colors handle both light and dark backgrounds very well. The light colors are always visible over the dark colors and vice versa, such as when dark color text is used over a light background. There are six accent colors that look good over any of the four possible background colors. And they are color-blind friendly.
Themes -> Colors -> Create Theme Colors, you can check a color's RGB value and borrow it or you can change a particular color to what you like.
Many slide show projectors show dark backgrounds and light text better than they show light backgrounds and dark text.
Google Images , Settings -> Advanced Search, usage rights -> free to use or share.
Creative Commons Search - search images that are licensed under Creative Commons.
WikiMedia Commons - an online host site for Creative Commons images, sounds, and other media.
Richard Harrington's Blog - a list of free images websites.
Images in the public domain for which there is no fee or licensing:
Government photos: State and federal images are in public domain and are free to use. One way to locate them is through Flickr. Flickr -> Search -> Licenses -> U.S. Government Works
Library of Congress: A great source of images. Many images are in the public domain. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/collections/
The photo archive at Gimp-Savvy.com http://gimp-savvy.com/PHOTO-ARCHIVE/
If the work was published in the U.S. before January 1, 1923, you are free to use it in the U.S. without permission. - See more at: http://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/public-domain/welcome/#sthash.aUAdGZLx.dpuf
References:
Creating a Pecha Kucha Presentation Using PowerPoint http://blogs.cofc.edu/tlttutorials/2012/10/25/creating-a-pecha-kucha-presentation-using-powerpoint/
10 Tips to Create and Present Pecha Kucha http://blog.indezine.com/2012/05/10-tips-to-create-and-present-pecha.html
How to Fade Your Images in PowerPoint without the Help of Photoshop http://www.guidingtech.com/16107/fade-images-powerpoint-without-photoshop/
What is the theme? - PowerPoint https://support.office.com/en-us/article/What-is-a-theme-7528ccc2-4327-4692-8bf5-9b5a3f2a5ef5
Creating mask in PowerPoint http://technotoolbox.blogspot.com/2009/09/creating-masks-in-powerpoint.html
Posted January 9, 2019
By Michele Knight
Can you recall the last time that you sat in the audience of a PowerPoint Presentation? What was that experience like? If the presentation was a typical, it probably included:
The presenter reading directly from the screen
Lots of bullet points
Distracting animations and transitions
I have been conducting a Pecha Kucha Workshop for college faculty titled Pecha Kucha Create Presentations with Pop and style for three years. I always open our session by asking faculty to think about the last time they had the pleasure (or pain) of sitting through a PowerPoint presentation. I want them to think about what worked and what could have been improved. Invariably, the conversation brings up many-- if not all-- of the points mentioned above. The misuse of presentation technologies can distract from the content and lead to boredom and disengagement.
Why Pecha Kucha?
The Pecha Kucha format can help to remedy many of these common PowerPoint woes. Pecha Kucha was developed by the managers of a Japanese Architectural firm (Klein Dytham Architecture), that was suffering from many of the same presentation issues highlighted above. The Pecha Kucha method consists of 20 slides, and the speaker speaks for 20 seconds about each slide. If you are doing the math, the total length of your presentation time is 6 minutes and 40 seconds. Creating a presentation less than seven minutes long, with only twenty seconds per slide cuts down on the rambling that is often characteristic of PowerPoint delivery. A successful Pecha Kucha is tightly edited and arranged in bite-sized pieces. It requires careful consideration to arrange the slides in a sensible way. It also incentivizes presenters to rehearse so as not to waste time. The result, typically, is a polished presentation.
Another feature that sets the Pecha Kucha apart from a traditional presentation style is the design of the slides. As the audience only has twenty seconds to absorb each slide, you want to select an impactful image that is worth looking at for twenty seconds. The slide will only be visible to the viewer briefly, so it should not be an image that the audience has to labor over. Pecha Kucha benefits from tight structure while also giving creative latitude to the presenter, turning the act of presenting into storytelling.
As an instructor, you can do a lot with this presentation format to make presentations livelier and more engaging to your students.
Let’s look at some ways you can use Pecha Kucha with your students.
Pecha Kucha Presentation Template
1. Mini-Lectures:
Structure your lessons around two or three Pecha Kuchas that are about seven minutes in length. Each of these mini lectures can cover a major theme for your lesson. Between each mini-lecture, provide students with an activity that reinforces the main concept of your lecture.
2. Introduce a topic to your students
Since the Pecha Kucha is so short, it is an ideal format to introduce a new topic to your students. An introduction to a topic via Pecha Kucha can be used either face to face or online. After using a Pecha Kucha to introduce a concept, you can allow time for questions and answers, or an online discussion board inquiry.
3. Image Rich Review of a Topic:
At the conclusion of your lecture, or online material, use the Pecha Kucha method to provide students with an image-rich review of the concepts that you presented.
4. Final Exam Review
When reviewing for your final exam, create a few Pecha Kuchas with a topical overview of your content. After you present each Pecha Kucha, let your students interview you with any additional questions they might have about preparing for the final exam.
5. Tell a Story
Do you have a relevant story that fits in with the material that you are presenting in your traditional or online classroom? Tell that story in Pecha Kucha Format, using compelling images, in 6 minutes and 40 seconds.
6. Visual Case Scenarios:
Are you already using case studies with your students? If you are not already using case studies, are you interested in using them with your students? Either way the Pecha Kucha format gives you a great way to present a case study with your students and get them practicing skills! After you present your case scenario to your students, consider letting them work through the case in groups.
7. Project Overview:
If you are assigning a project to your students, “pitch” the project to them by using the Pecha Kucha format to outline the project’s requirements. After you present the project to the students using the Pecha Kucha format, students can interview you for clarification. If you are using the Pecha Kucha format to pitch the project online, a bonus is that the students will have a succinct presentation that they can review as needed to gather project requirements.
8. Online Presentations:
When creating presentations for students in an online format, brevity is key, otherwise students will not watch the presentation. The Pecha Kucha method allows you to employ chunking when you post a video, and to deliver the material in bite-sized pieces.
9. Big Picture Concepts:
Most instructors have big picture concepts that are important to their field. You can use Pecha Kucha to deliver these big picture topics to students. Highlight the topic, why it is important to your field, and how it contributes to the history of your field. This gives students a foundation in the thinking that characterizes your discipline.
10. Introduce yourself to your students
Whether you are teaching an online, blended, or face to face course, as a first step, you introduce yourself to your students. Use the Pecha Kucha format to introduce yourself to your students, talk about why you chose your field, your teaching philosophy and other items you feel comfortable to share in a unique, picture format.
11. Vocabulary Pecha Kucha
If students need to recall vocabulary or other concepts, give each student a vocabulary word from your list, and have each student create one twenty second Pecha Kucha slide on the definition of their word. Each student takes turns delivering their word to the class.
Help students make sense of the Pecha Kucha
Since the Pecha Kucha format is a brisk paced format, I recommend faculty develop some exercises to help students “unpack” the Pecha Kucha that was just presented.
One Minute Paper
One tactic you can use is the One Minute Paper. After you deliver the Pecha Kucha, you assign a one-minute paper, where you ask the students about the main point of your lecture. In a face-to-face class you can then call on a few students to read their papers. That will check comprehension and spark discussion.
Muddiest Point paper
If you know that your Pecha Kucha covered a dense topic consider having students complete a muddiest point paper, where you ask them what they found most unclear about the Pecha Kucha.
How students can use Pecha Kucha
The Pecha Kucha format is not just for faculty. Pecha Kucha provides students with a good template for presentation development which moves the focus from reading bullet points to effective presentation, followed by discussion.
1. Group Projects
Pecha Kucha gives students a structure to complete group projects. Since the format is only seven minutes long, this gives you lots of opportunities to assign students a specific portion of a topic. This saves you from needing to listen to several versions of the same presentation. Your students will also be more engaged when they listen to their peers as they will be presenting on a different topic.
2. Personal Reflection Presentation
Student ePortfolios are popular in Higher Education right now because they encourage student self-reflection and introspection on the relationship of their current learning to the world around them and their careers. Pecha Kucha gives students a great structure to reflect on your course content and how it has affected their lives.
3. Student Introductions
At the beginning of a semester, you have students introduce themselves to each other because it builds community. Get your students to introduce themselves using Pecha Kucha and give them a structure to organize their thoughts and tell a compelling story.
4. Teach a topic
The best way to learn something is to cultivate the ability to teach it to someone else. Give your students a chance to instruct their peers using the Pecha Kucha format. Select a lesson and assign different groups to teach each theme, Pecha Kucha style. After the lesson each group can entertain questions.
General Tips for Pecha Kucha Development
Since the Pecha Kucha is about storytelling, when designing a Pecha Kucha, you should start with thinking about the story you are going to tell in seven minutes or less.
Start by developing a storyboard, rather than developing directly in PowerPoint. This will help you focus on the story you are trying to tell instead of designing a PowerPoint and trying to make your presentation “fit” the PowerPoint you develop. Low Tech storyboarding tools include:
Index Cards
Printing the Notes Pages of a PowerPoint Slide
Time each slide to make sure that it is 20 seconds. Remember to add time for pauses and transitioning to the next slide
Next, intentionally plan the images that will go on your slide. Plan thoughtful images that highlight the theme you are trying to convey. Try to think of the images that will advance your message before you even start looking for images.
Places to find image Pecha Kucha images:
Do a google search for images that are labeled for reuse, or reuse with modification
www.photosforclass.com creative commons images with attributions included
Tips for Designing the actual Pecha Kucha in PowerPoint
How To Setup Pecha Kucha Powerpoint For Mac 2017
Avoid most PowerPoint templates as they are cluttered and difficult to digest when working with twenty seconds per slide.
Text should be kept to a minimum. If you need text, use brief keywords or phrases, as you only have 20 seconds per slide. When using text, use a Sans-Serif font, such as Helvetica or Arial.
Avoid using Sound clips or videos.
Set the slides to automatically advance after 20 seconds.
Don’t use slide transitions. The slides advance so rapidly that the viewer will find transitions distracting. You don't need sounds or video clips. Your voice will carry the presentation.
Rehearse your Delivery of the Pecha Kucha
Practice what you are saying. This rehearsal is critical to being able to be polished while delivering the Pecha Kucha. Listen to your delivery. Do you have too much to say? Remember to breathe as you present. If the timing is tight, edit your presentation. You don't want to sound rushed while delivering the Pecha Kucha.
Additional Resources:
Baker, T. J. (2014). Pecha Kucha & English Language Teaching: Changing The Classroom. Amazon Digital Services LLC.
Shank, Patti (Ed.). (2011). The Online Learning Idea Book, Volume 2: Proven Ways to Enhance Technology-Based and Blended Learning. San Francisco: Pfeiffer.
Official Pecha Kucha Website: http://www.pechakucha.org/faq
How To Setup Pecha Kucha Powerpoint For Mac Pdf
Bio:
How To Setup Pecha Kucha Powerpoint For Mac Download
Michele Knight is an Instructional Designer for the Department of ELearning Innovation and Teaching Excellence, (ELITE) at Montgomery College. Her primary role is to help faculty integrate technology into their teaching. Prior to working for Montgomery College, Michele was employed as a Multimedia Specialist for Chesapeake College. Michele’s professional interests include teaching with mobile technologies, techniques to build public speaking skills, and the effective integration of technology into instruction. She holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Computer Information Systems and a Master of Arts degree in Instructional Systems Design, from the University of Maryland Baltimore County. To get in touch with Michele, please visit www.linkedin.com/in/michele-knight