Wimba User Group Meeting Room
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Join Us Each Week

The Wimba User Group is on Summer Vacation                  

  • New to Wimba Classroom? Contact us and we will answer your Wimba questions or set up a time to give you a live Demo.
  • Subscribe to the K-12 Wimba Mailing list for meeting reminders and info.

 

Watch Past Meeting Archives

DateArchive Link
May 12, 09Understanding Slide Targets
May 5, 09Troubleshooting Tips and Tricks
April 28, 09The Wimba Classroom eBoard
April 21, 09Utilizing Breakout Rooms
April 14, 09Sharing Live Applications
March 31, 09Common Teaching Activities
Mar 24, 09How to use media with Wimba
Mar 17, 0910 Tips for Meeting Prep
Mar 10, 09Archiving Wimba Events
Mar 3, 09Creating Polls
Feb. 24, 09Setting Access Privileges
Feb. 10, 09Application Sharing
Feb. 3, 09Content Management
Jan. 27, 09Wimba Room Administration
Jan. 20, 09Wimba Classroom Interface
Jan. 13, 09Setting up Wimba on your my.uen page
Nov. 18, 08Guest: Heather Young, CEU

Web Resources

Documents
Keys to Successful Wimba Presentations

When Using PowerPoint in Your Wimba Presentation

These thoughts come from a book entitled Cutting Edge PowerPoint 2007 for Dummies.

Text is the soul of a presentation — it relates to content like nothing else. Your text could be in the form of titles, subtitles, bullets, phrases, captions, and even sentences. A barrage of visual content might not be able to achieve what a single effective word can say — sometimes, a word is worth a thousand pictures. Text is significant because it means you have something to say. Without explicit text, what you’re trying to say might not come through as strongly as you want.  

Too much text is like too much of any good thing — it can be harmful. For example, a slide with 20 lines of teeny-weeny text just doesn’t work. The audience can’t read it, and the presenter doesn’t have time to explain that much content! Anyway, if you’re cramming so much text on a slide, you’ve already lost the focus of your presentation...."