Multimedia Presentation Tools >>>>> |
This is a site for students to create online presentations in 4 different formats: infographic (vertical boxes of text and graphics), report, banner, and presentation.
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Students create a slideshow set to music by adding images, text, and video to slides. They arrange the order and theme of the slides and can adjust the music. |
ThingLink works as a way to present information visually and interactively. Students start with a single image and embed “buttons” on the image that expand into pop-out boxes of information, video or sound when moused-over.
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Adding Sound to Your Presentation
This site offers Royalty Free Sounds from Creative Commons and Public Domain only at SoundBible.com These sounds are completely royalty free, meaning you can use them commercially without paying a cent.
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Citing Images in Presentations
The best practice when picking photos or other images to place in your project, is to use a site that offers free, downloadable, correctly attributed images. I like Pixabay and Photos for Class, but there are many others. Here's a great website with lots of sources for finding and using free images for presentations!
http://www.only2clicks.com/pages/joycevalenza/343504 The image here of the dog is from Photos for Class. The correct attribution information appears correctly on the image itself. You can use these freely without any other citation!
Don't Just Copy and Paste Pics from Google!Simply Google searching an image and copying it into your project requires that you'll need to check the copyright status of each image you find to see if it's licensed for reuse. If you can't remember where your image came from, watch the video below to learn how to reverse image search in Google.
>>>>>> https://youtu.be/tnr6-cXFVzs |
This comprehensive document has excellent information about how to correctly cite the images you use for your projects. Click to the "Keep Track of Everything You Use" page at the end.
Published by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation (www.cci.edu.au) in partnership with Creative Commons Australia (http://creativecommons.org.au).
Find this factsheet on the ccAustralia website at http://creativecommons.org.au/materials/attributingccmaterials.pdf |
>>>>>>>>> eghs.egusd.net <<<<<<<<