"I can live with doubt and uncertainty and not knowing. I think it is much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers that might be wrong" (Richard Feynman)

Friday, October 17, 2008

New Guidelines for Group Presentations























  1. For students to discover new views of their own worldviews and others.
  2. To counter the ethnocentrism of US educated students
  3. To compare multiple emic views and bring a slice of it to the week's conversation.
  4. To bring Baruch's diverse cultures into the mix--consider using your own cultural backgrounds as a starting point for the discussion.
  5. To present a group view of the subject in 20 mins or less in a way that expands or disturbs our social constructs about the week's subject.
  6. Before or immediately after your presentation, create a group post to further the discussion and capture what your presentation was about.
Next week's subject in the Kottak and Conformity&Conflict readings is Families, Kinship and Marriage. Here are some great suggestions (NOTE: SUGGESTIONS) for each group's preparation. Delegate tasks so each group member contributes more or less to the project in a way that works for them.
  1. BLOG & BLACKBOARD
    Review the video Did You Know 2.0 (8 mins) and checkout our blog's tag cloud, videobar, and newsfeeds. Use your group's email/discussion board on Blackboard.
  2. THE CONTEXT IS DECISIVE
    Explore how the U.S. and your home country have changed using gapminder.org. Watch the gapminder.org tutorial first to quickly understand how to use it.
  3. FIND A KEY CULTURAL CONSULTANT
    Skim the articles on Anthrosource and/or Lexis-Nexis through the Baruch Library DATABASES page or search current news videos from NYTimes, Associated Press, PBS and/or National Geographic. Also look at the bibliographies for the chapters of our weekly reading.
  4. THAT WAS OUTTA CITE!!
    Cite or keep track of all the sources used (urls, books, articles, videos) and create a bibliography as a group post on the blog for our class and the next to use for the week's subject. Oral communication requires documentation, too.
  5. TO POWERPOINT OR NOT TO POWERPOINT?
    Despite what I've said before, you CAN use powerpoint (see a great example about water). Instead of talking, use only visual or sonic communication (photography, hypertext, music, film, audio). How about dancing to learn about courting practices in mating??
  6. SOCIAL COLLABORATION 101
    Consider creating a slideshow, a social bookmarking account with Digg or Delicious, a youtube channel, or a Flickr or Tumblr account that can be used and built upon next class (ask Prof. G to create an acct for long-term use).
  7. DANCE IN THE CONVERSATION
    Get us out of our seats, if possible. Use polling or taking a stand, etc. http://www.activetraining.com/active_learning/WeaveCourseContent.pdf
  8. K.I.S.S.
    Keep it simple, stupid. The best stories and presentations are simple. Think Chris Abani in his TED Talk.
IDEAS FOR FAMILY (or another chapter):
  • Compile family photographs or Google images for the week's subject and create a slide show that reflects the members of your group.
  • Choose a provocative video (e.g., on Shakers) to create a panel of experts discussing the pros and cons followed by Q&A.
  • Choose a familiar word related to the subject (monogamy). Create a slide with a definition from Merriam-Webster's Dictionary. Then show other slides comparing same word or idea defined in other ways, from other sources, famous or indigenous people's sayings, jokes, or other dictionaries, such as a French, Swahili, or slang dictionary.
THE BEST PRESENTATIONS
What makes the best presentations the best, you ask? Hmm. I decided to search the web on that and found a few interesting links:

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The video was very nicely done. like any good persuasive speech/video would be; it piqued the viewers interest with the simple question "Did you know?". That's BRILLIANT! I actually did not know most of those things. Things like the country that is predicted to have more English speaking citizens is China? Where did that come from? It was pretty creepy to be told that a single 1000$ laptop will exceed the capabilities of the entire human race. Do we really want to technology to get to that point? Is it not enough that we can already do things we couldn't normally do no less than 5 years ago?

Anonymous said...

ANT 1001 (4:10)
I enjoyed that video very much. The music used almost put me in a trans, which made me more interested in what I was reading! The simple question "DID YOU KNOW?" made me think of how people actually find out these facts. It takes anyone to ask a question before human's try to find an answer. Like, "How can we communicate faster?" was probably asked before e-mail became a solution.

One thing that stuck out in my mind was how soon a $1000 laptop will exceed the ablities of the human brain, I in a way don't understand how this is possilbe. Human's are the ones programming a laptop (or any computer), so how can exceed humans?

Either way this video is very interesting to me!