Creative Commons License & Tips to do a good presentation
1.
2. WHAT IS CCL?
Forsythe,G. (Artist). (2012). Copyright, course materials and you! [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from
http://goo.gl/aaJUn2
3. WHAT IS CCL FOR?
Dombres,C. (Photographer). (2011). The battle of copyright. [Image of photograph]. Flickr.
Retrieved from http://goo.gl/QgY2gS
4. HOW CAN I LICENCE MY WORK?
STEPS
TO
FOLLOW:
[Image of painting].
creative commons.
Retrieved from
http://creativecommons.
org/choose/
5. TYPES
No Copyright: Public
Domain CC0
Key License Terms:
Attribution: the work can
be reproduced and remixed
the author is credited.
No Derivative Works: the
work can only be
reproduced textually.
Share Alike: the work can
only be distributed using
the same license you have
used.
Non-Commercial: the work
can only be reproduced,
remixed or distributed for
non-commertial purposes.
Own creation
9. WHERE CAN YOU FIND CCL?
Jamendo (2008). jamendo_logo. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/ZNzlw0
(2013). [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/oENNLr
Kosta, U. (Artist). (2011). Youtube logo. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved
from http://goo.gl/g43VlF
Gray, J. (Artist). (2010). Europeana
logo. [Image of painting]. Flickr.
Retrieved from http://goo.gl/Jycwyg
10. HOW IS CCL FINANCIALLY
SUPPORTED?
Donations
Program Services
General and
Administration
Fund-raising
Own creation
11. TIPS TO DO A
GOOD ORAL
AND VISUAL
PRESENTATION
12. 1. A good orator must have self-esteem;
believe in yourself.
Barbara (2012). week 43 - Confidence [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/wz3BdZ
13. 2. The orator must guide the audience so
they get involved in the presentation.
Cash Luna, M. (2010). Pastor Cash Luna, y Juan Diego Luna - Congreso Parejas Excepcionales [Image of
painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/HvUoFH
14. 3. If something goes wrong don’t get
nervous and give up, you can always
redirect the exposition.
Souza, M. (Artist). (2012). Keep calm and carry on. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from
http://goo.gl/03GyZ8
15. 4. Know your audience; you then will know
how to get their attention.
Cornelis, M. (Artist). (2013). Audience. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/0tMZQk
16. 5. Use personal anecdotes and surprise
your audience. Try some well-known songs,
political references, innovative resources…
Korotkov, E. (Artist). (2007). Happiness & surprise. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from
http://goo.gl/2QTXK1
17. 6. Follow a good structure: introduction,
development and conclusion.
MacEntee, S. (Artist). (2011). Presentation outline. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from
http://goo.gl/7JRYKl
18. 7. The content of the exposition must be
solid; focus on the relevant information.
Ias - Initially (2011). An Important Gadget [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/n7WnXr
19. 8. Keep in mind the objective of your
presentation throughout the exposition;
don’t beat around the bush.
Own creation
20. 9. What you do and your emotions on
stage influence the audience; show
enthusiasm.
Daniel (2011). 24/52 Emotion [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/TsmPWv
21. 10. Remember you are the STAR of the
exposition; don’t let the slide-show take
over.
Sabia, M. (Artist). (2006). The perfect software architect. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from
http://goo.gl/w33XZr
22. 11. Prove yourself you really know the
content of the exposition and you are able
to explain it without trouble.
Shorrock, S. (Artist). (2011). Listen, understand, act. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from
http://goo.gl/gShNNd
23. 12. If you use any writing, make sure it is
well seen from the back row and that it is
all in the same font and palette of colours.
ShapeMoth(2013). Palette and brushes (1) [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/bE4Oih
24. 13. Make sure you use high quality
graphic resources such as videos, photos,
graphs and so on. However, don’t be too
excessive!
Lema, D. (Artist). (2008). Lomo collage. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/5MF0nw
25. 14. Be simple; less is more.
Floriana (2008). Less is more [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/vLCbEZ
26. 15. Be original; use your own templates
but try to use neutral colours for the
background and more vivid colours for the
foreground.
Students,T. (2012). Creativity Poster - Andrea. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/kNrjNB
27. 16. Don’t make the slides to difficult to
understand; they need too be understood
by the audience in about 3 seconds.
Ellis, S. (Artist). (2013). 3 seconds. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/xt0BBO
28. 17. ALWAYS face the audience and
NEVER read from a paper or the slide.
Leandro, M. (Artist). (2009). Venom
explicando topología humanoide. [Image of
painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from
http://goo.gl/wkW9yF
Camon (2012). Josep Martínez explicando analítica web
[Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from
http://goo.gl/ty2S3q
29. 18. Transfer what you are saying to daily
events to make it more comprehendible for
the audience and finish with a powerful
ending.
Ransomtech (2011). Understanding [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/UZBUzD
30. 19. Use metaphors in your speech to
make it more dynamic and easier to
understand.
Time flies.
Couse, R. (Artist). (2013). Time flies. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/fTPklA
31. 20. Repeat the main concepts to make sure
they get to the audience. Like Martin Luther
King’s “I have a dream”, repeat the most
meaningful phrases to touch the audience.
Ceccarelli, E. (Artist). (2014). I HAVE DREAM. [Image of painting]. Flickr. Retrieved from http://goo.gl/xZDUvl