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Dynamic Education for Turbulent Times

Dave Everitt

Pecha Kucha / Ignite

I first came across this Pecha Kucha idea by stumbling over O'Reilly's Ignite events website (roughly: 5 minutes, 20 slides, 15 seconds each) and I'm preparing to run one at the place where I'm being... well, a thinking/ideas/research person.

If you've attended one (or more) of these events, I'd be really interested in your opinion about: what worked, and what didn't? How might it be adapted (if at all) for an academic or research environment?

Tags: ignite, kucha, pecha

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We've used this quite a bit, thanks to an intro to the idea one party evening round a pool from Rob Hill of Ogilvy ZA - both for open 'unconference' evenings run by Dave Duarte (there's a couple of examples on his blog), in the Nomadic Marketing course and in teaching on the Creategy course, and sometimes in Executive Education programmes. I find that generally it works excellently, as long as there is a narrative/plotting structure - or some sort of storyboard - that allows a flow and coherence. Also, I think, it's like a cadence in the background to the presenter's performance, so I find myself thinking about the performance that I am aiming to give, and the impact that, more or less, i hope to achieve, and use the slides to keep momentum up and maintain rhythm. Oh, and images, more than words, I find.
I'd love to hear what others have found.

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Thanks Jon, that's really useful information - especially the hint about storyboarding and the use of images. I can't find the examples on Dave Duarte's blog, though.

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This should get you there, Dave. http://daveduarte.co.za/emotionally-intelligent-signage-pecha-kucha...
there's an example by dan Pink there.
I just thought again - the ending is quite important too as it can fizzle or be too hyper - not sure what but maybe a 'wicked question'/unanswerable dilemma - or a really funny/quirky/ironic example - or a 'go here for more info' link... hmmm

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Being an Open Source advocate I'm alarmed to read that someone can own the 'rights' to something like Pecha-Kucha (or is that a joke?)... thanks for the pointer, I was thinking of mirroring the process after the presentations by offering one minute for each person with a single question/point, and another minute for the relevant respondee to answer them. I like the idea of ending on a conundrum or similar.

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I've not been to an actual Pecha Kucha night, but we've used the 20x20 format for several presentations during weekly conference calls at work. It can be a great format for getting ideas across, and of course the time limit helps tremendously, to keep things moving along. Wherever you do it, know your technology, and be prepared for glitches. I've done it over a videoconference, which degrades the image quality. One time, I had to speak my voiceover without even being able to see the slides. So... know your script.

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thanks Ben - it's good to read about your experiences. The evening I'd planned has been put off until more people are available, but when it happens I'll add feedback about it here.

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Hi Dave,

I attended the first ever Pecha Kucha event in Cape Town last night.

It went really well, though some of the presenters didn't make use of their slides as well as they could have. The ones with stronger images worked better I found.

I think it's uses outside just the design community could be great. I know Dave Duarte used it in his Technomadic Marketing course...

I think some of the presenters didn't realize it requires a lot of effort to get your point across in the short time-span and they needed to link their presentations together better.

In a learning environment it's uses could be great as the attention span of learners is shorter than ever and with each presentation being roughly 7 minutes you never really lose concentration with this format...

Would love to hear if you have any success with it.

Regards,

Jeremy

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Thanks Jeremy - some really useful comments. It does seem strong imagery works well for both presenter and audience. I'll now be running our event later this year, so will certainly be back on Huddlemind with a report and (hopefully) some video.

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