No one can deny the universality of English. It is one of the most important languages in the world today. It is the mother tongue of about two hundred million people. There are more than three hundred million people speak English as their first or native language. Another three hundred speak it as foreign language. English has become a means of communication in everyday life. Therefore, the need of learning English has been increasing day by day all around the world, including in Vietnam. During the previous three years, I and my friends had chances to study English thoroughly in terms of four skills practice reading, listening, speaking and writing. I would say that speaking is one of the most important skills that learners must master during the learning a foreign language process. However, speaking another language is not an easy task for all people. To this one, it is easy but to the others it is so difficult. There are many factors such as: students motivation, students characteristics, learning materials, teachers teaching methods, etc... which affect students achievement in learning English speaking skill.
11 Dos and Don'ts of Using Images in Presentations Sin 1: Using pixelated or blurry images A blurry image casts a very poor impression Sin 2: Tiny Images Don’t use tiny images that require audience to carry binoculars A high quality image lets you play up that visual on your slide, so go for it WHAT TO DO: If you have lots of text to incorporate, allocate half the slide to text and half to the image as you can see in the Do slide below: Sin 3: Overuse of visuals These presenters are the ones who have taken the use-image-advice a bit too seriously They collect as many images as can be fit into a slide and squeeze their content into the space left Why they this? They find several relevant visuals for a single slide For instance, in the Don’t slide below, the presenter has a slide on business goals and objectives of a start-up All visuals used in the slide are pretty relevant and the slide would have been great if the presenter went with a single, big image WHAT TO DO: Choose one high quality image that sums up the main theme of the slide Choose any visual that represents Goals and Objectives; it’s not necessary to pick an image for each of those goals If you want to show each goal visually, dedicate a complete slide to each Check out the difference: Sin 4: Multiple pictures arranged poorly Sample Premium Templates - Business Presentations • Excel Hourly Timeline Chart Ppt Sample Presentations • Motivation Sales Ppt Sample Presentations • Digital Media Planning Briefing And Planning Process Powerpoint… • Sales Performance Reporting Ppt Sample Presentations • Yes, there are times when the slide warrants multiple pictures A campus view, various benefits of a product, trip collage, etc require you to arrange multiple visuals aesthetically This, however, requires basic design knowledge such as giving frames or borders to each image The Don’t slide below is a bad way to arrange your images WHAT TO DO: Place your image along grids using the Gridlines feature (View tab) in PowerPoint Or give them a frame using the default frames in PowerPoint (Format tab) The Do slide below is a good way to arranged multiple pictures in a single slide Sin 5: Cliparts that add no value, except shock value If you haven’t heard so many presentation experts screaming their heads off calling clipart crappy and tacky, hear us now These cartoonish characters add absolutely no value to your slide and make you look a tacky presenter too An exception is always there, say designing a cartoonish slide is your purpose, but they don’t stand a chance in a corporate presentation In the Don’t slide below, the clipart of suited professionals can still be forgiven but why not show your awesomeness like the Do slide shows WHAT TO DO: Nothing, just forget about clipart Any visual would look better than it Sin 6: Watermark Images This is the worst sin of all Even if you make the image small enough to hide the watermark, many in the audience would be quick to spot it and trust us, it’s the worst thing that can mar the reputation of a presenter WHAT TO DO: Need we say anything here? Please buy the image; don’t attempt to blur or remove the watermark even if you know how to it Sin 7: Pictures with headache-inducing backgrounds WHAT TO DO: Choose an impressive visual that covers the whole slide If you want to show growth, there are hundred options you can choose from- towering building, bar diagram, growth of a plant from sapling to tree, ladder steps, etc If you have lots of text to accommodate within the slide, add a transparent layer over the complete image and then place your content As you can see in the Do slide below, the image and content complement each other to create a professional, sophisticated presentation slide Sample Premium Templates - Mission Statement • Vision And Mission Statements PowerPoint Presentation Slides • Vision And Mission Statement Chart Ppt Background Template • Corporate Vision Mission Statement With Icons Powerpoint… • Mission Statement Powerpoint Slide Template • Vision And Mission Statements Powerpoint Topics Sin 8: Amputating people while cropping images WHAT TO DO: If the image itself is poorly composed, you need to take it again or choose a different picture In the Do slide below, a different image has been taken and it’s taking up the same area without any need for cropping But what you if you have a large-sized image that covers the complete slide space? Chop off all body parts left and right so that you can show the faces? Let’s take another example Check out the Don’t slide below which has been brutally cropped to fit the content Even the head and the crucial handshake signifying partnership has been hacked for convenience Now, check the Do slide- you only need to minimise the photo, crop the unnecessary portions (not the limbs, please), give it a nice frame (Go to the Format tab and check out the default Picture Styles) and tilt the photo to make it stand out and relevant to the slide Not bad, uh? Sin 9- Badly stretched photos This sin is unforgivable and makes your slide an eyesore of the worst kind Even if the stretched photo is of a high quality! What was the presenter thinking? We know The presenter has a picture of a certain dimension, say in a portrait style, but wants to display it in the landscape format So he stretches it to accomplish his mission knowing the damage he is doing to the image and the complete slide The Don’t slide below is an adaptation of a similar slide I came across on a presentation sharing platform This also happens when a presenter chooses a shape and uses the Picture fill option in PowerPoint to fill the area with an image If the image has a different aspect ratio than the area of the shape, PowerPoint will stretch the photo to fill the area, distorting the image in this process WHAT TO DO: If you use the Picture Fill option in PowerPoint and the image gets stretched, follow these simple steps: •Click the stretched photo •Go to the Format tab on PowerPoint ribbon •Under the Crop dropdown menu, choose the Fill option (see the screenshot below) PowerPoint will resize the image while maintaining the original aspect ratio of the image: Source : https://www.slideteam.net/ ... Format tab and check out the default Picture Styles) and tilt the photo to make it stand out and relevant to the slide Not bad, uh? Sin 9- Badly stretched photos This sin is unforgivable and makes... has a slide on business goals and objectives of a start-up All visuals used in the slide are pretty relevant and the slide would have been great if the presenter went with a single, big image... multiple pictures in a single slide Sin 5: Cliparts that add no value, except shock value If you haven’t heard so many presentation experts screaming their heads off calling clipart crappy and tacky,