Required Resources Read/review the following resources for this activity: · Textbook: Review chapter(s) applicable to your presentation ·

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

· Textbook: Review chapter(s) applicable to your presentation

· Lesson

· Headset microphone (If your computer does not already have a built-in microphone, then you can find this item under the “Additional Items” section in the CU bookstore).

·

Narrated PowerPoint Tutorial


Links to an external site.
 (Make sure to review this tutorial before you begin recording.)

· Minimum of 4 scholarly sources (from Weeks 5 and 6)

Introduction

Your PowerPoint presentation is due this week. Most of you will have a mic built into your computer, but if you don’t, then you are required to obtain a headset microphone to produce the PowerPoint narration. Headset microphones can be purchased from the CU bookstore or at any electronics or discount store for between $10–25. When purchasing a headset microphone, consider the ports available on the computer being used and purchase accordingly.

If you face technical trouble, go to “Help” on the blue sidebar menu and submit a ticket. 

Review the Narrated PowerPoint Tutorial (in Required Resources) for instructions on how to record the narration.

PowerPoint Project Timeline

Due

Description

Week 4

PowerPoint Topic

Week 5

PowerPoint Outline Rough Draft

Week 6

PowerPoint Outline Final Draft, Images, and Sources

Week 7

PowerPoint Presentation

Week 8

PowerPoint Evaluation

Instructions

The following are the best practices for creating your speech presentation:

·
Title Slide: Include the title, audience (who you prepared the presentation for: school or institution), the presenter who prepared and narrated, and the date.

·
Attention-Getter: Give the audience a reason to pay attention. Make them want to listen to your speech.

·
Thesis: Clearly state the purpose of your presentation

· On this slide, establish the tone of the presentation and include any questions you think your audience might have about your topic—questions you will answer during your presentation.

·
Body of the Presentation (multiple slides): Include the information you found during your research and organize it in a visually pleasing manner.

· Use some type of division, like levels of headers or titles.

· Use words and phrases to clarify key points.

· Provide researched evidence for each point.

· Cite your evidence, quotes, and statistics within your presentation using

· Include in-text citations ( ) on the slides, as well as the full reference information on the last slide.

· Include images to add visual appeal to the slides.

·
Summary and Conclusion: Summarizing is similar to paraphrasing but presents the gist of the material in fewer words than the original.

· An effective summary identifies the main ideas and major support points from the body of your outline or presentation.

· Minor details are left out.

· Summarize the benefits of the ideas and how they affect the thesis statement of the outline and the main objective of the presentation.

· End with a final strong statement regarding the intent of the presentation.

·
References: Use the APA reference format. The illustrations should be included with your resources. APA tutorials are available in the Chamberlain University library. Keep in mind the following:

· At least 4 authoritative, outside scholarly sources are required from the Week 6 outline. (Anonymous authors or web pages are not acceptable.)

· Appropriate citations within the presentation are required on the last slide. Just copy and paste this from the last page of your outline—the References page. References should be in APA format.

· Each resource should be entirely double-spaced.

· All entries must use hanging indents—the first line is flush left, and all the rest are indented.

· All Chamberlain University policies are in effect, including the plagiarism policy.

 Additional Hints

· Use a 
minimum of 5 visual aids to further clarify and support the written part of your presentation. You could use example graphs, diagrams, photographs, flowcharts, maps, drawings, pictograms, tables, and Gantt charts. If a slide appears boring, then strongly consider adding a visual. It is the blend of text and images that makes the slides engaging for the audience.

· Animation and video clips should 
not be used for this speech. YouTube is 
not allowed.

· Do 
not type out text onto the slide and then read it during your presentation. Remember, you are the teacher, so teach, don’t read!

Click on the following link to view a presentation of sample slides. Click on the arrows to scroll through the slide show.

Presentation Requirements (APA format)

· Time Length: 5–7 minutes

· Slide Length: minimum of 8 slides

· Slide Content

· Title slide

· Attention-Getter

· Thesis

· Body of the Presentation

· Summary and Conclusion

· References slide (minimum of 4 scholarly sources from Week 6 outline)

· Minimum of 5 visual aids

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