Giving Fruit Baskets As Presents

It is the time of year when people begin to think about sending gifts to their relatives, coworkers and other special people that have influenced their life in some way. As the holiday season shifts into full swing the creative gift giving selections are a wonderful way to let someone know that they are important. For some a fruit basket is the ideal thank you or appreciation that is formal enough to be shipped to clients and employees, yet is casual enough to be presented to family members.

With all of the festivities that keep individuals busily entertained from November to January finding time to go shopping for gifts can be difficult. Outside of making several trips to the mall for gifts and racing from one party to the next the frantic yet enjoyable holidays keep many people rushing around. However by spending a few minutes online shoppers can order the selections of fruit baskets that are appropriate for everyone on their greeting card list and still find the time to accept all of the invitations to the various gatherings that request their attention.

By searching through a single website that has taken the guesswork out of online fruit basket shopping anyone can quickly find the right present to give to the important people in their life. Whether that means distant aunts and uncles who live out of state or a significant client that has been a loyal and profitable customer throughout the year, the special designs and combinations of fruits and nuts are enough to keep anyone happy. By ordering online for the special people in life, quality and time delivery can be guaranteed from the people that present fruit baskets for holiday gift giving.

Using PowerPoint Presentations in a Language Classroom

If you teach in a language classroom (ESL or any other language really), eventually you will ask your students to do an in-class presentation. Presentations are a great way for students to showcase their abilities and gain confidence using their new language in a stressful yet safe environment.

In most situations, the purpose of asking a language student prepare and perform a presentation is so that they can demonstrate their abilities to:

  • choose their topics
  • generate ideas by brainstorming
  • then logically organize and show they can
  • make sensible relationships between them
  • use intelligible English in front of an audience
  • all within a specific time frame

These are all very important skills, for a language learner who intended to peruse a career in business or in academics. For most language students just being able to accomplish these tasks in a new language is a great feat in itself – forget about complicating the process with posters and software like PowerPoint.

However, after nearly 15 years of teaching, I have found that the first thing students want to do is use PowerPoint. I think in most cases they feel that they will be more ‘impressive’. Regardless of the reasons, when students decide to use a software tool like PowerPoint, their focus changes from preparing a good presentation towards building the slides. As a result many problems crop up. Some of the most common traps you will see students falling into include:

  • Including more text than needed
  • Adding in distracting sliding visuals and sounds
  • not practicing enough (because they use the slides as a crutch)
  • reading slides word for word
  • looking at the screen more than the audience
  • having compatibility issues with the software

What so often ends up happening is that the technology gets in the way of the student putting on a decent presentation. Now I’m not blaming the technology here, the problem comes from lack of experience with both the technology and also with giving presentations. These problems are not limited to language learners by any means. Native English speakers who aren’t very experienced have very similar issues as well. However they can become a very bad combination for a language learner who is also trying to cope with language problems.

Regardless of whether you are a language student, or a native language speaker, you really want to avoid:

  1. handing out the slides on paper, then
  2. putting the same slides up for the audience to read and then
  3. reading the slides out loud as your presentation.

This would simply be a waste of everyone’s time.
So should language learners use PowerPoint as a tool for giving presentations? Well I think the answer to that is a qualified ‘yes’. Before they do, they need to be reasonably comfortable with the language they are studying. Then they need to have some instruction/guidance in developing content and presenting it with PowerPoint. Once they’ve had that, they will be more capable of controlling the technology instead of being controlled by it.

How to Create Presentations With Keynote for the iPad

Keynote is easily one of the strongest presentations apps. We find Keynote provides the most “wow” of the 3 programs in the iWork suite as Keynote is one that truly shows off the visual capabilities of the iPad.

Basic Features

Keynote can create dazzling presentations with animated transitions and graphics on your iPad. If you plan on using Keynote with any frequency, you should look into buying a keyboard for your iPad to work effectively. Keynote is very intuitive to work with and allows you to create presentations that display photos, graphics, and bullet pointed text. Just remember with the iPad version of Keynote you are limited to what files and formats the iPad display.

Templates – Currently Keynote comes with 12 standard templates that cover most types of presentations from display sales and financial data for businesses to school presentations. When selecting a template, you will be prompted to insert pictures and fill out texts. The interface is very intuitive and user friendly and you just follow the instructions to create the basic presentation.

Slide Transitions – You have a choice of slide transitions: flip, dissolve, pop, twirl, spin, zoom, and many more. You are not limited to one type of transition for a presentation as you can choose from the menu of transitions from one slide to the next.

Style Text – When creating or editing a presentation, you can change the text style as you wish. To change the text style, just tap a text block to select it. Tap the Style text “icon to get to the “Style, Text, and Arrange” tabs. The Style text icon is the located in the upper right hand corner of Keynote. It’s the farthest left icon in the upper right hand corner that looks like a lowercase “I” within a white circle. After you select the style text icon a pop-up box with appear allowing you to change the style, text, and arrangement of the highlighted text.

Images and Graphics – The next icon to the right of the Style Text icon allows you insert media, tables, charts, and shapes. This icon looks like a mountain range in a picture frame. This icon allows you format and add photos as well as other graphics including tables and charts in your presentation.

Animated Transitions – Right after the “images and graphics” icon is the animated transitions icon. This icon looks like 2 diamonds. To add animated transitions, on the left hand side tap any thumbnail slide in your presentation. A “none” box will appear next to that slide. Tap the “none” box. This bring up the “Transitions” pop up box. Simply go through the list of transitions and choose whichever you wish. Tap the “Options” tab in the transition box to edit the length and time of the transition. This will allow you to create self running Keynote presentations and decide how long the viewer watches each slide.

Change settings – To change the settings tap the “Tools” Menu. This icon looks like a wrench. From this tool you can print, adjust settings, use the search tool, and get help. In addition you can add notes for the presenter by tapping “Presenter Notes.” Under “Settings,” you can spell check your presentation as well as select the edge guides and slide numbers.

Playing a presentation – The play icon is the normal triangle shape icon we are all use to seeing. Once you start to play your Keynote presentation, tap or swipe the slide to go onto the next slide. If you want the presentation to run automatically without tapping a slide after pressing the play icon, set your transitions to advance automatically.

Adding a New Slide – Tap the “+” icon in the bottom left hand corner to add a new slide. A pop up box will appear allowing you to choose the format of the Slide. Among the selections you can choose a Title page, blank page, partially formatted text page, etc.