... a quarterly journal published by Global Learning Partners
 
Autumn 2007
ISSUE 11

Weighing in on the PowerPoint Conversation

A response to Dwayne Hodgson's article Blending Dialogue Education and PowerPoint

by Christine Little
Global Director of Learning and Organization Development
Habitat for Humanity Int'l ~ Americus, GA

Where I work (Latin America), PowerPoint is de rigueur, and a signal that the “presenter” knows what he/she is talking about. In a current process we are undergoing with strategic planning, I am also seeing PowerPoint presentations that are purposefully designed to impress, rather than to inform.

When I teach Dialogue Education, I focus a lot on the idea of putting the content into the hands of the learners. In fact, we use clay to demonstrate the difference between content being presented as a static untouchable truth, versus content presented as something I need to take apart, put together, push, pull and mold in order to really learn it and decide to let it change me in some way.

When we get to the inevitable PowerPoint question, I take one of my flip charts with a model on it, and I rip it in half. Then we talk about whether that is something that can be done with a PowerPoint, how does our perception of the content change when it is presented in a beautiful PowerPoint presentation. How much more “true” is it there, as compared to on a piece of paper.

It is usually a great dialogue and many people identify their own tendencies to overvalue content that is based on its “presentability” rather than its relevance and usefulness.

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