Notebooking with Powerpoint

April 12th, 2007
  

Benefits of Notebooking in general:

  • Can be used with any style of homeschooling
  • Creates student ownership of content
  • Inspires creativity
  • Easy review

Benefits of Notebooking on the computer:

  • Completely free (you already have the computer if you're reading this ;)
  • No printing unless you want to archive the finished product
  • No scissors, glue, or irreversible mistakes
  • Less time-consuming (well, it can be)
  • Student pride in professional-looking product
  • Works for non-crafty as well as crafty; non-visual as well as visual; non-computer geek as well as geek
  • Multimedia can be added! Recordings of dramatic readings; photos; videos of actual events in history; videos of experiments; live links to web sites
  • Easily sharable via the web, email, print
  • Ready for sharing with your family, homeschool group, 4-h club or scout group (excellent public speaking opportunities!)
  • Paper copies are easily printable
  • Professional quality archives can be had for pretty cheap!

The queen of electronic notebooking, Tammy from Moore Homeschool Adventures, has a Yahoo group and a free online course on how to get started. Before I ran into Tammy last year I had been using Powerpoint for notebooking for my kids. This is my 2nd year homeschooling, and I came from a background teaching middle school. My students loved making Powerpoints for presentations and reports. So I brought that into my homeschooling, and my kids loved it too. Tammy tends to use word processing programs for her notebooks, and offers templates, ideas and inspiration all for free.

I prefer using Powerpoint most of the time. When I talk about Powerpoint, I would like to add that if you use a Mac and don't have Office, Keynote has the same basic functions. If you have Windows and don't have Office, you can get OpenOffice.org for free, and use the Impress program to do the exact same things! Here's why I love to use Powerpoint.

  • Powerpoint is meant to create content that will be viewed on the computer; this makes layout a no-brainer (important for me as a very non-visually-gifted person)
  • Powerpoint is also meant to be printed, and there are many different print options.
  • Anything you can do on a word processor can be done in Powerpoint; the opposite is not true
  • Multimedia can be set to play automatically at a certain point in the project without needing to be clicked
  • Powerpoint can export as images, web pages, or self-contained presentations that people can watch even if they don't own Powerpoint. On a Mac, it can be exported as pdf or a Quicktime movie as well.
  • Audio narrations can be added to go along with the display.

Here are some notebooks we have done with Powerpoint.

This is a History notebook on Ancient Rome by my 7y.o., Ben. This powerpoint was exported as .jpg files and stored at flickr.





Since it is stored at Flickr, you can click on each photo to see a larger version. If I choose to, I can display each slide much larger, like this:

Or even like this:

Here's another History notebook by 7 y.o. Ben. This one is on the early Middle Ages in Western Europe.






I have exported the above powerpoint as a web page as well. The links for navigation are created automatically by Powerpoint. See it as a web site here:
Early Middle Ages notebook

If I wanted to print this notebook myself, there are several options. I could print one slide to a page, like this. I could print 2 slides per page like this. I could print 4 slides to a page like this. In fact, I could print up to 16 slides to a page (although that would get a little hard to read, if the purpose is just to keep a paper index of notebooks, this would be a great paper saver).

At the end of the year, I can print all of a student's notebooks into a professional bound book that will last a lifetime using a service such as Blurb for as little as $12.95 (for 20-40 pages) up to 440 pages for $64.95 (that is definitely cheaper than ink and supplies for regular notebooking or lapbooking an entire year!) Once the book is created, grandma and grandpa can even order their own copy from the site effortlessly.

Here are a few more examples of notebooks we have done. So much more can be done that we have not even delved into yet (this is only our 2nd year homeschooling after all). The options are endless.

Presidential Timelines - by Kevan, 11 y.o. at the time
Earth's Surface - by Kevan, 11 y.o. at the time
Fables - by Ben, 7 y.o.

Century Books
We are going to be starting Century Notebooks a la Charlotte Mason. I have set up some Powerpoint templates that we will be using to create these century books. They are already set up and hyperlinked, which took quite some time, so I welcome anyone that would like to try it to use them. If you pass them on, please mention where they came from. So far I have created the 17th-20th century. These are blank .ppt templates.
17th Century
18th Century
19th Century
20th Century

Powered by ScribeFire.


6 Responses to “Notebooking with Powerpoint”

  1. laraszoo on April 13, 2007 4:19 am

    That is a really great idea. My oldest has done some power point presentation style projects, but I never even thought of introducing it to my little ones.

  2. Conficio on April 13, 2007 6:32 am

    I’m not convinced that Computer presentations do really replace something like a notebook well. The process of physically clipping something and pasting it into a book and writing annotations to it has a sensual element to it.

    If I’d look for tool I’d rather create a Wiki that allows a non linear structure (a major benefit of computers and the web). The drawback that is that you can’t easily print it and you are not confined by the page structure of a presentation.

    Just my five cents.

    K<o>
    Busy, supporting non technical users of OpenOffice

  3. Robin on April 13, 2007 7:05 am

    I LOVE it! What a great idea! I’m going over to the free online course and we are going to try one in the next few weeks. Maybe I’ll even get brave and post it….. If I can figure out how ;-)
    Thanks for the info and the inspiration!
    ~Robin

  4. Sarah on April 13, 2007 7:53 am

    Conficio -
    I laughed when I read your comment because for *me* (and my boys although I’ve tried!) physically clipping, pasting and writing is anything but sensual. Unless by sensual you meant masochistic. However, even for those who love working with physical materials, electronic notebooking can have a place.

  5. Sherry on April 17, 2007 3:43 pm

    Very impressive! I think my kids would love to give this a try, & might even get hooked on it. They love using the computer.

    My oldest is in college & had to make a PP presentation for a business class. After all the other presentations, the students were pretty bored, but my son made his with a Matrix theme & included some of the famous sound bites at appropriate places. They loved it! And since my youngers saw his presentation, I’m sure they could be inspired to make their own.

    And my youngest son hates to cut out things, too. :-)

    Thanks for the great post.

  6. SmallWorld on April 18, 2007 6:29 pm

    Absolutely phenomenal! What a great idea! I have one that would love to notebook via powerpoint, another that loves hands-on cut and paste. The beauty of homeschooling is that we can cater to both~

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

Name (required)

Email (required)

Website

Speak your mind

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-Spam Image