Advanced Powerpointhandout
Advanced Powerpointhandout
Advanced Powerpointhandout
-- Table of Contents -1. Intro to PowerPoint 2007 2. Refresher of Some Basic Things / Working with Menus 3. Animating Objects in PowerPoint 4. Using Images & Videos 5. Rehearsing Slide Timings and Recording Narration 6. Converting your slide show with audio to a web-presentation 7. Using Dual Monitors When Presenting 8. Using PowerPoint for a Poster Layout page 1 page 3 page 4 page 6 page 7 page 9 page 11 page 12
1. Intro to PowerPoint 2007 a) About the .pptx file extension By default when you save a file in PowerPoint 2007, it will save it with the .pptx extension. This is the new format introduced in Microsoft Office 2007 documents. It is a combination of
XML architecture and ZIP compression for size reduction.
Making Office 2003 compatible with Office 2007 files If you try to open a .pptx file with PowerPoint 2003 you wont be able to unless you have downloaded and installed the Microsoft Office Compatibility Pack. To get it, go to www.microsoft.com and search for office 2007 compatibility pack Note, with Powerpoint 2007, you can save a .ppt file that is compatible with Powerpoint 2003 from within PowerPoint 2007 (choose Save As, then under Save as Type choose the .ppt format) b) Menus PowerPoint 2007 contains all the features of 2003 and more. The biggest difference you will notice right away is the menus are different. The way you used to get to various menus to do things has changed. In PowerPoint 2003 menus were at the top of the screen, the bottom, and the right side. And these menus could be moved and placed on other sides of the screen or they could float anywhere on the screen.
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In Power Point 2007 all of the menus are organized at the top of the screen. Instead of pull-down menus that display just words, the menus in PowerPoint 2007 (and in all Office 2007 products) have a more graphical look to them. Small icons give you a visual sense of what the menu item is for instead of just reading text. Everything you need is in the top menu bar. The menu bar is locked down and cannot be moved. There still are some specialized menus on the right-hand side, such as the Custom Animation menu. Dont be intimidated by the menu bar. You will notice that when you find where to go for a certain function, that the menus that occur on the 2nd level are the same as in PowerPoint 2003. Getting Help Finding menu items If you are searching in the new menus and cant find what you want, try this. Microsoft has developed very good support tools for the transition from 2003 to 2007. Whenever you cant find how to do something in 2007, but you remembered where it was in 2003, Use the Command Reference Guide on Microsofts website. Go to http://office.mircosoft.com In the Search box type: powerpoint command reference guide then search From the search results you will see, a link to the Interactive: PowerPoint 2003 to PowerPoint 2007 Command Reference Guide Click on it and then bookmark the location in your browser so you can find it later. This guide will show you PowerPoint 2003 and let you click on a menu item. Then it will show you PowerPoint 2007 and highlight exactly how to get to the same item using the menus in 2007. c) Some New Features SmartArt Graphics Ability to set a multitude of attributes for text, shapes and pictures such as soft edges, reflections, 3D rotations, bevels, glows and shadows just to name a few Quick change view (zoom in or zoom out) slider in bottom right Chart advanced features like changing data on x and y axis PhotoAlbum - Create a slideshow with one picture on each slide very quickly with this feature. Add Comments and Mark-ups similar to Word Inking - Add drawings to your slide with the mouse or if you have a table PC with a pen on the screen. Protect Presentation - Restrict access to presentations Preview your presentation in black and white or grayscale
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2. Refreshing How to do Some Basic Things / Getting Familiar with the Menus in Powerpoint 2007 - TASK 1: Inserting New Slides Picking a Layout
Select the Home menu click the New Slide button (#1 below). A new slide will appear. Now click the Layout pull down menu (#2 below) and choose a slide layout.
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Above note the chart on the left in PowerPoint and the data on the right in Excel. These are separate windows and you can minimize, maximize, resize or close these as needed. Next you can now change all attributes of the chart, colors, chart type, change x and y data, etc
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In the example above, the Fly In entrance effect is chosen. The blue oval will fly in from the Left, Very Fast when the mouse is clicked. - Multiple Effects can be given to a single object AND multiple objects can be animated at the same time. - Objects can be animated not only for how they enter the screen but also for how they exit the screen. - Motion Paths or paths that objects should follow can also be created for interesting effects.
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Just like images, make sure you proportionately size the movie by clicking on one of the CORNER handles and dragging it. TIP: You can combine a playing video AND have a list of items progressively disclose automatically or as you click the mouse. Use the Triggers button located in the Timing tab of a custom animation effect.
d.
Inserting Sound
After you have acquired a sound clip, you can insert it into PowerPoint by choosing the Insert menu, click on Sound (See image above). In the window that opens browse to your sound and select it. You will be asked if you want the sound to play automatically when the slide comes up, or wait for you to click on the sound to start it.
b. Recording Narration
To record audio narration you will need a microphone. Plug the mic into the mic input jack on your computer. Double-click the volume icon in your taskbar.
This will open the sound mixer. Make sure the slider labeled Microphone is about halfway up and it is NOT muted. Under the Slide Show menu , choose Record Narration. A box like the one below will appear.
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1) Click on Change Quality and next to Attributes choose 44.100kHz, 16 bit, Mono from the pull-down menu. This will create an audio file that is good quality. The rule is: the better the quality, the bigger the file size will be. 2) Click on Set Microphone Level Follow the instructions to test your microphone. You must see the green bar moving to know you have audio going to the PC. You wont hear your own audio out of the speakers. 3) At the bottom, Link narration in: Either choice is OK to use, here is what each will do: If not checked. The audio will be embedded into the Power Point file. This will create a large .PPT file size. If you want to edit the audio later, then you will need to save the power point file as .HTM which will export the audio as individual .wav files, then re-insert each audio clip manually into each slide.
If checked. The audio will be saved as an external .wav file in the same folder where your power point file is saved. The actual .PPT Power Point file size will only increase slightly. If you need to edit the .wav files, as long as they are saved in the same folder with the same filename, they will stay linked with the correct slide in Power Point.
4) When you are ready to narrate a slide, select OK and begin. If you are not on the first slide, the message below will appear. Select the option you like. If you already had audio on the slide, it will be overwritten when you get to that slide.
5) When you want to finish recording, press the Esc key. You will be asked if you want to save the slide timingsYou must click SAVE.
NOTE: If you want to go back and just re-record only 1 slide a) Make sure you are on that slide in Power Point, before going into Record Narration b) Record you narration and press Esc. Do not advance the slide to the next one or else the audio on that slide will be overwritten.
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On the Media tab (see Impatica Screen Shot 2 below) 4) Choose the Sound Format pull down box. There are 3 choices to adjust the quality which the sound will be set to use. The higher the quality the larger the file. I find the middle choice AU uLaw (5x Compact Size) is a good choice. 5) Finally press the Impaticize button and let it work.
B) Camtasia This program is distributed by IRT and requires that you attend a training session where IRT will load it onto your PC - Camtasia will capture everything that happens on your screen, in a high quality format so text and image details are very readable - You can choose to capture you mouse arrow to show your mouse movements, what you point to, etc. - You can choose to capture video (such as a shot of yourself speaking) - Various layout templates allow you to arrange where the screen capture and the video window are placed - You can display a table of contents when you produce the presentation - A lot of controls so this program takes a while to learn what everything does - After everything is captured, edited and placed the program needs to render (or publish) the presentation which can take several hours For more information on Impatica or Camtasia AND to find out when IRT training sessions are held, contact www.drexel.edu/IRT
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To use this powerful feature, your computer must be capable of dual monitor support. Most notebook computers with Windows XP have this capability, allowing you to see the presenters console on your notebooks screen while projecting just the slides through the external monitor port. You must also know how to select the output of your laptop to go to the external monitor. Usually this is done by using a combination of keyboard keys, the Fn key and one of the F button keys. Look for a monitor-like icon on the key or the words LCD/CRT. To set up your computer for dual monitor support, follow these steps: 1. Connect a monitor or LCD projector to your laptops VGA connector 2. Even though you connected a monitor or projector in Step #1, make sure you have your laptop set so the display is only seen on your laptop screen. 3. Click the Start menu, point to Settings, click Control Panel, and then double-click the Display icon. 4. On the Settings tab, select the monitor icon for the presenter's monitor (usually 1), and then select the Use this device as the primary monitor check box. If this check box is selected and unavailable, the monitor is already designated as the primary monitor. Only one monitor can be selected as the primary monitor at a time. When you select a different monitor icon and complete step 2, this setting for the previous monitor is automatically cleared and becomes accessible again. 5. Select the secondary monitor icon, and then select the Extend my Windows Desktop onto this monitor check box. 6. Click the Apply button.
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Once dual monitor support has been enabled, you can set up PowerPoint to use it: 1. On the Slide Show menu, click the Set Up Slide Show button. 2. Under Multiple Monitors, find the Display slide show on list, click the monitor you want the show to appear on (for instance, the projector or large monitor, rather than the presenter's monitor or laptop). 3. Select the Show Presenter View check box. 4. Click OK. 5. To start the slide show, click the icon. (Note If you are not using the presenter view, clear the Show Presenter View check box in the Set Up Show dialog box, and run the show as you would on a single monitor, clicking to advance the slides.) To move between slides or trigger the next animation, click the arrow buttons. To show a slide out of sequence, click a slide in the thumbnail list. To end the show, click the End Show button.
6. 7.
You can use PowerPoint to lay out your poster, and then take the Power Point file to a commercial graphics house or to a Drexel department with a large format printer for printing. First figure out how big your poster needs to be. For our example, well use a final poster size of 3 high x 6 wide or 36 x 72. Next, you will need to set-up your Power Point slide for this size. Select File, then Page Setup. The maximum size for a slide show in PowerPoint is 56 x 56, so if you want your poster to be 6 wide or 72, you will need to set the width of the page to the final size, then tell the printer to print the poster at 200%. In our example the width would be 36 (1/2 of 72) and the height would be 18
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Now you are ready to start adding a title, authors, DrexelMed logos, pictures, charts, etc. TIP: For copies of logos and usage policies, check out the DrexelMed Brand Identity Manual at http://www.drexelmed.edu/FacultyandStaffResources/BrandIdentity/NameLogoTrademarks/tabid/ 2051/Default.aspx
18 pt
72 pt
|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------| 0 1 2 3 4
When selecting text size for a poster, keep in mind that posters are generally viewed from a distance of 4 or more instead of 1 for regular printed material. Therefore, text on posters should be at least 4 times as large (actually only 2 times as large if you will print the final poster double size) as you would normally use for a printed document. Its best to experience the text size for yourself. Print out a sample 8.5 x 11 sheet of paper with some of the text on it at the actual size that it will be on the poster. Hang it up and step back 4 feet and see how it reads.
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_________________________________________________________________________
Technology in Medical Education Queen Lane Medical Campus K Wing-Medical Simulation Center 215-991-8511 Arnold Smolen, PhD, Associate Dean for Information Technology [email protected] George Zeiset, Director [email protected]