Interpersonal Media (Fall 2020)/Final presentation

On December 7th and 9th the class will be hosting two virtual presentations sessions. Please read the information below carefully.

General Information
You won't be surprised to hear that I'm expecting that the final presentations will present your final project for the class. I'm truly not expecting anything extra out of these presentations which is why I've listed the expectations for the presentations and paper in the same section of the syllabus. The paper and the presentation are just two opportunities to showcase the same project. Details about the expectations for final projects are on the relevant section of the syllabus.

If the class were happening in person, everybody would be expected to give feedback during class during a poster session. The sessions will be held entirely online in Canvas asynchronously in a Canvas group discussion forum. That link will work as presentation groups are finalized but will not work until then.

I expect everybody to spend about around 95 minutes participating on they day are not presenting (i.e., about the length of the class session). As a result of the asynchronous nature, I've extended the period of time that folks can give feedback to 24 hours: from 3:30pm on the day of presentation until 3:29pm the following day.

Structure
The basic structure is going to be as follows:


 * Everybody in the class will be sorted into a Canvas group discussion into a groups with ~9 of your classmates (there might one fewer). Each group contains a random selection of 5 people presenting on Monday and 5 people presenting on Wednesday.
 * Presenters will all upload videos on or before 3:30pm on they day they are presenting.
 * At some point after 3:30pm on the day they not presenting all non-presenters will watch the videos uploaded by their groupmates who are assigned to present that day and will give them each feedback that aims to help them revise their work for their final projects.
 * I will also watch all the videos and look over the uploaded PDF or image material and give presenters detailed detailed feedback.

Plan: Presenters
All students must do two things do two things before 3:30pm on the day they are presenting. You are welcome to do these at any point in advance:


 * 1) Upload your presentation material in PDF, PNG, or JPG to "Final Presentation" dropbox in Canvas. I expect most people will be just be uploaded and exported slide deck from PowerPoint, Google Slides, etc.
 * 2) Upload you video of your 4-7 minute long "pitch" in a message in the Final Presentation Peer Feedback group discussion group on Canvas within their assigned group. You all can do this by posting a new message and clicking the  "Record/Upload Media" button above the text box and then clicking the "Upload Media" post on the follow-up tab.

Because there are there two different groups presenting, there is no listed due date on the Canvas assignment. Your due date is 3:30pm on the day you are assigned to present. I cannot give any credit for late assignments.

Plan: Non-Presenters
All students must do the following thing on the day they are not presenting:


 * 1) At some point after 3:30pm, watch each short video pitch for the 5 people in the your assigned group that are presenting that day.
 * 2) After watching each the video, spend a minimum of 7 minutes writing a reply to each of the day's presenters' messages in Canvas giving them feedback on their presentation and pitch. Saying you liked the pitch is fine but focus on giving substantive, critical feedback that will help each person make concrete changes and improvements to the work in the presentation to produce a better final project. Feel free to ask questions about things you were unclear about. Feel free to give concrete suggestions for course material that might be useful or connections that might be helpful. I expect everybody to spend between 7 and 12 minutes giving feedback to each of the day's five presenters in their group.

Each person will give feedback to 5 others. I expect that this assignment will take a maximum of 95 minutes (<7m to watch each videos; <12m for each piece of feedback). This is less that period of time you would all spend in class.

All feedback is due 24 hours after the start of class on the day after you are not presenting (i.e., 3:29 pm on Tuesday or Thursday). Feedback will be graded as part of participation and I will weight it so that it's equivalent to preparation for two case sessions. I cannot give any credit for late assignments.

Presentation Format: Video Pitches
I are asking you all to prepare and share video version of your presentations as "pitches" for our project.

In terms of the video: we are not expecting anything fancy. I understand that folks are coming to this with different technical skills and working in a variety of living situations due to the pandemic. I am going to assess you entirely on the content of your presentation and pitch. I will not assess you on the production quality of your video. The pitches should be 4-5 minutes long and not more than 7 minutes in length.

I'm quite open into the nature of the video but here are some ideas:


 * If you have been building your presentation in PowerPoint, Keynote, or similar, the easiest thing is probably just to create a "screencast" that records audio of yourself talking while recording video of whatever is on your screen. There are a bunch of tools to do this:
 * Here's information on how to use a built-in screen recorder in Windows 10
 * Here's information on how to do screen recording on Mac OSX
 * Here's a video about how to record yourself using Microsoft PowerPoint on Windows
 * Some people like the following software: Camtasia (proprietary but has a free trial); CamStudio (free/open source software but harder to use). I haven't used either.
 * If it's easier, feel free to just use a cellphone or webcam video. For example, have a friend record you as you talk through an actual "poster" version of your presentation laid out on a table.

If you run into trouble, please ask on Discord for help. Keep in mind that I use Linux and are unlikely to be able to do much to trouble shoot specific problems. That said, your classmates will likely be of some help. If you figured something out, please give advice to others on Discord. If you've got experience doing this, please help your classmates.

Frequently Asks Questions

 * What should go into my presentation?:Details are on the on the relevant section of the syllabus.