My past experiences include time spent as a journalism student at Cal State Northridge and three years working part-time as a contributor to a regional high school sports website. As a result, I am very familiar with editing video in a non-linear digital format and would feel comfortable helping students develop that skill themselves. I also worked extensively with PowerPoint as I pursued my interests in history and urban studies by taking courses in those departments which included large presentations.
Visual media is usually more stimulating than text media. Compare the thrill of watching a high-speed chase or a sporting event live on television to reading about it the next day in a newspaper. The same ideal can be applied to the learning and creative process.
Image from KTLA
Many kids are visual learners. They and their classmates may benefit more from creating presentations on a subject and presenting it before the class than they might from writing a bland research paper which is turned in to the teacher. It also puts the student in the position of teaching, which may inspire some to pursue the teaching profession later in their life.
Microsoft PowerPoint is a presentation tool that students can begin to use as early as first grade and master by the time they finish middle school. In high school, PowerPoint can be used to create fully fleshed-out slideshows that can be used for class projects and presentations. PowerPoint is capable of far more than the simple text slideshows that most people associate it with. The program allows for the integration of images, audio and video to keep the audience engaged. It allows for collaborative creativity for students working in a group and allows every student to contribute according to their own personal talents. Students who are better at writing can write informative text slides, students who are better with images or video can contribute those. (Lewis 2008)
For more information on how PowerPoint can be used in a classroom, check out PowerPoint Magic, by Pamela Lewis. A free excerpt is available on the ISTE website.
Another good source on the topic is Teaching with Digital Video by Glen L. Bull and Lynn Bell. This gives teachers the basic steps on using digital video to develop a technology-enriched learning environment. A free excerpt is available on ISTE.
Source:
Lewis, P. (2008). Powerpoint magic. Retrieved from http://www.iste.org/images/excerpts/POWMAG-excerpt.pdf