I've looked at about 10 examples to share with participants in my next workshop and yours is the first one that not only explains Pecha Kucha but actually demonstrates the 20 second slide concept. Thank you.
I found your channel today and I am so excited. I was kinda starting to do some decluttering and early (spring) cleaning of my China Cabinet and I thought I'd just play videos or vlogs, something relating or about teacups and tea wares from YT ( on my phone) while I do my chore and inspire me further and make this activity/task more exciting. 'been listening to you for hours now and I thought I'd go back to your very 1st video. Thanks so much for all the knowledge. 💕
I just want to say THANK YOU for this video. I use it every year with my high school students when we start our public art Pecha Kucha presentations. We're in Providence too, so it is extra nice that this is just a professor down the street and not some random person on the internet.
This was VERY tremendously helpful to me. I do a lot of presentations, but have never done a Pecha Kucha. It's nice to see that lots of the things that make a good presentation, make a good Pecha Kucha presentation. I found this video demystifying, and appreciate you sharing it.
This is an excellent example of a Pecha Kucha presentation and can be very helpful to first time presenters in this format. However, this format is good in terms of its audience engagement, but there are two enormous problems: 1. You can not go in depth on any slide, so there is no thought provocation. It turns education into entertainment. 2. You need to use a ton if imagery. Rarely do I see any of it properly, if at all, cited. In a true academic or business setting, that is a failure. I get the format and I have been required to do it in classes, but to me it is a waste of a presentation. I could make a 5-10 slide presentation with three lines of text and a picture on each and cover far more ground and depth. The trade off for fluidity and imagery, to me, is not worth it when conveying an academic topic.
I've looked at about 10 examples to share with participants in my next workshop and yours is the first one that not only explains Pecha Kucha but actually demonstrates the 20 second slide concept. Thank you.
Woah 3:05 - 3:23 tripped me out.
fr lmfao
the part abt the scrpit had me trying to figure out if my audio was glitching
Students at every level could learn from this video. Thanks.
I found your channel today
and I am so excited.
I was kinda starting to do
some decluttering and early
(spring) cleaning of my
China Cabinet and I thought
I'd just play videos or vlogs, something relating or about
teacups and tea wares from
YT ( on my phone)
while I do my chore and
inspire me further and make
this activity/task more exciting.
'been listening to you for hours
now and I thought I'd go back
to your very 1st video.
Thanks so much for all
the knowledge.
💕
I just want to say THANK YOU for this video. I use it every year with my high school students when we start our public art Pecha Kucha presentations. We're in Providence too, so it is extra nice that this is just a professor down the street and not some random person on the internet.
THANKS for letting me know!!!! If you ever want a live version I'd be happy to visit a local classroom!!!!!
Excellent presentation on delivering presentations in general. Great tips, visuals that help tell the story - thank you!
This was brilliant, and very helpful. Thank you!
Thank you. Putting this to my grade 7-8 class as part of instruction. Well done.
This was VERY tremendously helpful to me. I do a lot of presentations, but have never done a Pecha Kucha. It's nice to see that lots of the things that make a good presentation, make a good Pecha Kucha presentation. I found this video demystifying, and appreciate you sharing it.
Wow! Really great job, Matthew! This was soooo helpful. Well done!!
at 5:06 you mentioned 4/20 slides, where that is?
My first pecha kucha is tomorrow at my job. I'm very excited!
Who tf is excited for a presentation? xD I envy you!!!!
Thank you for this great video - we'll be using it. Cheers
Thanks for posting. I have shared it with my students. --John
Great presentation and a design lesson to boot. A+
You broke the rules 6:59 min!
Hi, what program did you use to animate this?
I recorded the audio, and then exported my Keynote slides as jpegs, and knit them together with iMovie. Cumbersome and inefficient, but acceptable...
ah thanks!
The auto CC is a good start. I find them useful for saving myself editing time.
This is such a great video. I LOVE IT and will use it in an online tutorial for our master students. Thank you!
Very helpful thanks!
This is an excellent example of a Pecha Kucha presentation and can be very helpful to first time presenters in this format. However, this format is good in terms of its audience engagement, but there are two enormous problems:
1. You can not go in depth on any slide, so there is no thought provocation. It turns education into entertainment.
2. You need to use a ton if imagery. Rarely do I see any of it properly, if at all, cited. In a true academic or business setting, that is a failure.
I get the format and I have been required to do it in classes, but to me it is a waste of a presentation. I could make a 5-10 slide presentation with three lines of text and a picture on each and cover far more ground and depth. The trade off for fluidity and imagery, to me, is not worth it when conveying an academic topic.
Very useful. Thanks!
nice example. thanks.
SintLucas :p
your pronouncing Pecha Kucha wrong
+Samantha Pieper You're using the word "your" wrong.
Om from thw future
iIm a troll and i deem dis UNWORTHI OF BEING INTRANET FAMOUS( I EM ZUEZ SO I HAVE DAT OWER)
tis stinky as
Thank YOU very much 😁