Kiosk Presentation
Free-Choice Summative Assessment: Competency #2: Critical Thinking & Creativity
Explore, Discover, Create...Explore, Discover, Create...Explore, Discover, Create...Explore, Discover, Create...Explore, Discover
A Kiosk Presentation is a presentation without a live presenter. The audience views a slideshow presentation on the "kiosk" setting - an endless loop. The full message is communicated through written word, images and music.
Exploring the impact of a reader's "text to text" or "text to world" connection to a literary work, a kiosk presentation reveals how this connection offered the reader an opportunity to add depth to their understanding of the literary work.
Create a sub-folder inside your course folder.
Place all of your all work for this specific summative inside the sub-folder you created.
reader's response/viewer's response to the designated a literary work(s) from the curriculum
research completed as part of your study of the literary work (s)
Begin by identifying a "text to text" or "text to world" connection you made while reading a specific literary work. Add depth to this connection with research which explores the connection more fully. You may use Google Slides, PowerPoint or Canva.
Your kiosk presentation must incorporate research in terms of images, music and connections and include:
A title slide which features a title that identifies the literary work and text connection that's the focus of the kiosk. The bottom right corner of the title slide must include an MLA heading.
Parenthetically cited passages from the literary work(s).
Images/graphics which enhance and expand upon the meaning of the presentation as a whole.
Music which enhances and expands upon the meaning of the presentation as a whole.
A clear organizational structure which conveys a clear progression/sequence of ideas.
Your kiosk presentation must NOT overwhelm the audience with text-heavy slides or long spoken word passages. As a whole, the kiosk should reflect a balance and blend of text, spoken word, images and music.
You can find music for your presentation at Soundzabound (find passwords here).
Regardless of your tech-tool - Google Slides, PowerPoint, or Canva- you will need to be able to convert the final draft to a movie file (MP4). ALWAYS save your master draft file for future revision/remediation work.
Click here to take a look at clips from Ken Burns' documentary, The Civil War. It uses images, music, and spoken word to communicate in much the same way a kiosk presentation does.
Although you will have the opportunity to create a trend through revision, take the time to edit and revise as fully as possible now. It will pay-off in the long run and save you time. Use this link to help you with this process: Writing Traits.
Make sure you have submitted your completed summative (the MP4 movie file) to the indicated assignment in Google Classroom by the indicated date/time.
(You'll get your copy via Google Classroom.)