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WEB BASED PRESENTATION
Assignment Title: Web based Presentation.
Participation: Group.
Due dates:
Part 1, Team members and choice of topic (subject to instructor approval):
21 February 2001.
Part 2, Draft presentation: 28 March 2001.
Part 3, Final presentation: 11 April 2001.
(Part 4, Peer critique: 18 April 2001, separate
assignment.)
Format: Web based PowerPoint presentation of a title slide, fifteen
to twenty content slides, and a few annotated reference slides.
Submission Method: Upload to one of your your GSLIS accounts as
PowerPoint Webpages.
Maximum points: 20.
Introduction: Often in their role of information technology professionals,
students will find themselves educating others either formally or informally.
One tool they will find useful is the overhead slide presentation. Tools
like Microsoft's PowerPoint an easy way to create overhead slides to aid
in such presentation. In some cases, the professional will not always
be available to present the subject and the overhead slides will need
to serve as a self-contained tool for presenting the subject. Such a presentation
might well be added to a web site to increase its accessibility to others.
Goals: The goal of this assignment are:
- To gain experience in creating "teaching material" on an important
IT topic to be shared with and evaluated by your peers as well as by
the instructors. In this scenario, the student acts as an educator,
presenting a topic in absentia on a Website. Given that responsibility,
your finished assignment should demonstrate your group's professional
competence in the topic involved as well as reflect good pedagogy, good
Web design, and good use of PowerPoint.
- To gain experience in developing annotated bibliographies.
- To gain experience in posting PowerPoint presentations to a Website.
Tasks: For this assignment, students will:
- Based on the total size of the class, form yourselves into small groups
of 3 to 6 students. (The TA will help determine the size when the class
roster is received.) If possible, each group should members from more
than one geographic location so the group will get experience interacting
via email. This group may be the same group as in IT problem assignment.
- Select a team name from library and information science pioneers
(some examples are Dewey, Taub, Eratosthenes, Cutter, Garfield, Callimachus,
Tritheim, Bush, Gesner, Maunsell, Shaw, Bodley, Rostgaard, Panizzi,
Jewett, Luhn, Otlet, LaFontaine, and Ranganathan). This may be the same
name you used in the IT Problem assignment.
- Select one of the following topics:
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Presentation Topics
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Availability
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| Specific actors and technologies in the history
of information retrieval |
Available
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| Disintermediation |
Available
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| Rhetoric and information technology |
Available
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| Budgets and relative allocation of resources to
print and IT sources |
Available
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| Client/server architectures |
Available
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| Gender and IT |
Available
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| Usability |
Available
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| Boolean algebra and logic |
Available
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| Digital divide |
Available
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| Cognitive authority of digital resources |
Available
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| Knowledge management |
Available
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| Perl/cgi scripts |
Available
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| Babbage and difference engines |
Available
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| Alan Türing |
Available
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| Telegraphy |
Available
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| Telephony |
Available
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| Stored program computing |
Available
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| Telecommunications convergence |
Available
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| Cryptography |
Available
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| The Convergence of Library Science w/ IT |
Available
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| Important groups, specifically ACM..... |
Available
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| Netiquette |
Available
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- Post your team's name, members, and topic to the discussion board.
The TAs will add discussion board topics for each group as they are
approved.
- Jointly prepare a PowerPoint presentation about the topic. The content
of the presentation should occupy no fewer than fifteen and no more
than twenty slides; the title slide and any slide(s) devoted entirely
to references and/or endnotes are not counted among the "content" slides.
Be certain to cite your sources using APA formats.
- Jointly develop additional slides that give the complete APA citations
to your references and, in addition, to important print and online sources
related to the topic that you have not cited in your presentation. You
should choose at least ten sources, about 2/3 print and 1/3 digital.
- Annotate each citation with a one- or two-sentence evaluative summary
of how the source is useful for understanding the topic.
- As you progress, upload a draft of your presentation to the account
of one of your group members as a PowerPoint. Website. This draft should
have a minimum of ten working slides. Post the Uniform Resource Locator
(URL) of your presentation on discussion board so that all of us may
review your presentation.
- When completed, upload your final presentation as a a Website in
the account of one of your group, under the same URL as the draft presentation.
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