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For students who lack confidence or language skills, a multimedia presentation created using
tools such as Adobe Spark, VoiceThread, Google Drive, or iMovie is an opportunity to develop
fluency in English (or any target language) without the pressure of speaking live in front of an
audience. With the opportunity to record as many times as necessary, the fear of errors can be
eliminated, allowing students to focus on content, intonation, and organization.
With digital presentations, teachers can more easily check in on student progress and offer
instructional advice as well. Rather than everything riding on the live speech or presentation,
multimedia presentations can be more about process, and with process-driven assignments there
is greater opportunity for teachers to conference with students, offer advice, and provide
formative feedback. If the presentations are shared via the cloud, that feedback can even come
outside of class time.
All the same planning and organization that goes into writing a good essay goes into creating a
good presentation. Students start with a central idea, find supporting ideas and information,
structure those to build an argument or explain a concept, and finish with some kind of
conclusion. The only element of writing not present in creating a good multimedia presentation
is the conventions of writing (punctuation, paragraph structure, and so on), but the framing of
ideas and thinking processes are very similar.
Additionally, students have to find appropriate information to support their points of view in a
multimedia presentation as well as the photos, audio clips, drawings, or videos that go with them.
This requires students to cultivate good information-literacy skills, including searching
databases, evaluating resources, and creating citations.
As teachers, if we really want to foster creativity, we can require or encourage students to create
their own graphics, images, audio, and video clips. When students must create something, they
have to figure out how to represent their ideas -- a form of abstract, symbolic expression that ups
the intellectual ante tremendously.
With all the digital presentation tools at our fingertips, we can start building the next generation
of orators in effective, engaging ways. There's no reason not to start today.