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Official: Powerpoint Kills Your Brain
I personally loathe PowerPoint, which reduces all communication into a series of sales pitches; it disturbs me that kids are taught PowerPoint over creative writing. The article below discusses an Australian study into the effects of slide-show presentations on the human brain.
Anyone who's been a victim of "death by Powerpoint" - that glazed and distant feeling that overwhelms you when some sales droid starts their presentation - will be reassured by Aussie researchers who've discovered biological reasons for the feeling.Humans just don't like absorbing information verbally and visually at the same time - one or the other is fine but not both simultaneously.
Researchers at the University of New South Wales in Australia found the brain is limited in the amount of information it can absorb - and presenting the same information in visual and verbal form - like reading from a typical Powerpoint slide - overloads this part of memory and makes absorbing information more difficult.
Professor Sweller said: "The use of the PowerPoint presentation has been a disaster. It should be ditched.
"It is effective to speak to a diagram, because it presents information in a different form. But it is not effective to speak the same words that are written, because it is putting too much load on the mind and decreases your ability to understand what is being presented."
The theory of "cognitive load theory" suggest the memory can deal with two or three tasks for a period of a few seconds - any more than that and information starts to get lost.
Artist and musician David Byrne took on this same theme, creating a series of artworks using only PowerPoint.
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (3)
at 09:47 on April 4th, 2007
Where are kids taught power point over creative writing?
Just out of curiosity.
at 12:47 on April 4th, 2007
My old high school. (Quite) A few years ago I taught a few one-off Shakespeare courses and my former English teacher lamented the rise of programs like PowerPoint and the decline of good ol'-fashioned writing.
at 15:50 on April 4th, 2007
This is really sad.