A note on the use of these ppt slides. We're making these slides freelyavailable to all (faculty, students, readers). They're in Powerpoint form so you see the animations; and canadd, modify, and delete slides and slide content to suit your needs. They obviously represent a lot of work(over more than 20 years!) on our part. In return for use, we only ask the following:
The 6th edition version of our Powerpoint slides, which are no longer being maintained, arehere.
These Powerpoint sides are copyright 1996-2021 J.F. Kurose, K.W. Ross All Rights Reserved.
Last update to slides: October, 2020.
Comments welcome: kur...@cs.umass.edu
For the current paper, the researchers worked with co-author Gene S-H Kim, an undergraduate at Stanford University, who is blind, to improve the interface. The team tested it with two other blind users, having them recreate slides. The testers both noted that A11yBoard greatly improved their ability to understand visual content and to create slides themselves without constant back-and-forth iterations with collaborators; they needed to involve a sighted assistant only at the end of the process.
When you project a slide deck created in Google Slides (or a PowerPoint that is now located in your Google Drive), you have the option to see and show only the slides themselves, or to also see the presenter's notes. If you select "Presenter View," the presenter notes appear in a separate window alongside the slides.
The problem occurs when you want to "hide" the presenter notes from your audience. Google slides doesn't provide a quick solution here. If your laptop is set to present everything that is on your laptop screen to the classroom system, the audience sees both the slides window and the presenter notes window, exactly as they appear on your laptop screen. They see what you see. The simple solution is to not use Presenter View, because you have your "notes" on paper or you are so familiar with your slides that you don't need any notes at all.
If you are dependent on the notes or want to have a preview of the next slide, then you will want to use Presenter View. This is not as simple, but it is possible with some additional set-up on your laptop when you are connected to the classroom system. You will need to change the display setting so that the image on your screen is no longer mirrored onto the projector screen. By changing display settings, you will see your presenter notes on your laptop, but your audience will see the slides on the projector screen. You each have a different view.
Until the late-twentieth century, primary anatomical sciences education was relatively unenhanced by advanced technology and dependent on the mainstays of printed textbooks, chalkboard- and photographic projection-based classroom lectures, and cadaver dissection laboratories. But over the past three decades, diffusion of innovations in computer technology transformed the practices of anatomical education and research, along with other aspects of work and daily life. Increasing adoption of first-generation personal computers (PCs) in the 1980s paved the way for the first practical educational applications, and visionary anatomists foresaw the usefulness of computers for teaching. While earl