To have people experience agile development all through the tutorial, let's create a Learning Experience:
* Experiencing the pace of an agile project
- Timeboxing the subjects
- limited time (getting used to cutting time)
- prioritised information (getting used to getting most valuable info first, and this requires us to only treat the most important subjects.
- Experiencing the value of an agile project
- Feedback: doing several retrospectives during the day
- Communication: real life cases, group cases
- Courage
- Simplicity
Second Anko would like to do something different on the Power point slides. That is because of this: http://www.edwardtufte.com/tufte/powerpoint
(I still need to order the whole essay, but I already like the idea)
General idea:
- don't bullet your slides
- use common sense sentences
- differ between powerpoint handouts and actual tutorial notes (or articles)
>> Anko, I'm not familiar with this different way of doing Powerpoint slides, but it intrigues me. I always try to put some graphic or picture on my slides, even if it's just something fun, because bullet points do get dreadfully boring. One thing I'm keen on is limiting content of the slide, no more than 5 points. People try to cram too much on a slide. It's true that your audience will only remember about 3 points you made in the whole presentation. -Lisa
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