Brain Rules for Presenters

131
Brain Rules Takeaways & Quotes from Dr. John Medina’s What all presenters need to know A presentation (of sorts) by Garr Reynolds

description

One of the best books I have read this year is Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School. The applications for presentation are many. This is a book review of sorts, though I do not highlight all aspects of the book. I focus on the three rules that relate most directly, though all the rules have lessons. Just a fantastic book.

Transcript of Brain Rules for Presenters

Page 1: Brain Rules for Presenters

Brain RulesTakeaways & Quotes

from Dr. John Medina’s

What all presenters need to know

A presentation (of sorts)

by Garr Reynolds

Page 2: Brain Rules for Presenters

Dr. Medina’s findings discussed

in Brain Rules are ideas worth

spreading...So I extracted some quotes

and key points as they relate to

my field — presentation — to

help you spread the word.

Page 3: Brain Rules for Presenters

You can quote me:

Page 4: Brain Rules for Presenters

Brain Rules is one of the most informative, engaging, and useful books of our time. Required reading for every educator and every business person. My favorite book of 2008!

”— Garr Reynolds Presentation Zen

Page 5: Brain Rules for Presenters

Here’s your host for this presentation...

Page 6: Brain Rules for Presenters

Hello! My name’s Biff.

Agalychnis callidryas

Page 7: Brain Rules for Presenters

I’ll be your host for this online

version of the presentation.

Page 8: Brain Rules for Presenters

Why me? Three reasons: (1) Let my enormous

eyes remind you that vision is the most

dominant sense for you humans.

Page 9: Brain Rules for Presenters

And (2) allow my remarkable coloring and shape to remind you that you humans are wired to notice differences and patterns...

Page 10: Brain Rules for Presenters

And (3) let my tiny, primitive brain remind

you that, while I get the most use out of

my brain (as far as I know), you, my friend,

could learn to use your massive, evolved brain

much more effectively...

Page 11: Brain Rules for Presenters

And (3) let my tiny, primitive brain remind

you that, while I get the most use out of

my brain (as far as I know), you, my friend,

could learn to use your massive, evolved brain

much more effectively...

Right, on with the preso...

Page 12: Brain Rules for Presenters

Introduction

Page 13: Brain Rules for Presenters

This is Dr. John Medina

Page 14: Brain Rules for Presenters

This is Dr. John Medina

He knows how these work

Page 15: Brain Rules for Presenters

Why is he so happy?

Page 16: Brain Rules for Presenters

Because his book is

*%$#@ fantastic!Why is he so happy?

Page 17: Brain Rules for Presenters

These takeaways and quotes are based on three of Dr. Medina’s 12 rules

just>

Page 18: Brain Rules for Presenters

These takeaways and quotes are based on three of Dr. Medina’s 12 rules

just>

Here they are...

Page 19: Brain Rules for Presenters

Rule #1Exercise boosts brain power.

Rule #4We don’t pay attention to boring things.

Rule #10 Vision trumps all other senses.

Page 20: Brain Rules for Presenters

Why it matters

Page 21: Brain Rules for Presenters

If you are in education, you are in the business of brain development. If you are leading a modern corporation... you need to know how brains work.

”— Dr. John Medina

Page 22: Brain Rules for Presenters

Context

Page 23: Brain Rules for Presenters

In our world today...

Page 24: Brain Rules for Presenters

Death-by-PowerPoint is

so common that it’s just

considered “normal.”

Yeah, abnormal...

Page 25: Brain Rules for Presenters

Death-by-PowerPoint is

so common that it’s just

considered “normal.”

Yeah, abnormal...Abby Normal?

Page 26: Brain Rules for Presenters

Sometimes people aren’t even aware of their own ppt suffering:

Check this guy out...

Page 27: Brain Rules for Presenters

Nice PowerPo

int!

Page 28: Brain Rules for Presenters

What does Brain Rules say about presentations?

Page 29: Brain Rules for Presenters

Dr. Medina on presentations

Today

>

Page 30: Brain Rules for Presenters

Toss your PowerPoint presentations.“ ”— Dr. John Medina

Page 31: Brain Rules for Presenters

Why?

Page 32: Brain Rules for Presenters

Do you really have to ask why you

should toss your current slides?

Page 33: Brain Rules for Presenters

Because, “ ”says Dr. Medina...

Page 34: Brain Rules for Presenters

...it’s text-based with six hierarchical levels of chapters and subheads—all words.

“”Get that textoff the screen...

Page 35: Brain Rules for Presenters

...it’s text-based with six hierarchical levels of chapters and subheads—all words.

“”Get that textoff the screen...

Huh?

Page 36: Brain Rules for Presenters

Hello, McFly!

Page 37: Brain Rules for Presenters

It’s not working...

Page 38: Brain Rules for Presenters

So what?

Page 39: Brain Rules for Presenters

So stop doing this:

Page 40: Brain Rules for Presenters
Page 41: Brain Rules for Presenters

Which leads to this:

Page 42: Brain Rules for Presenters
Page 43: Brain Rules for Presenters

Which costs this:

Page 44: Brain Rules for Presenters

Time

Money

Page 45: Brain Rules for Presenters

You get what I’m sayin’?

Page 46: Brain Rules for Presenters

You get what I’m sayin’?

Now let’s look at how Brain Rules can help...

Page 47: Brain Rules for Presenters

12 Brain rules We’ll look at #1, #4, an

d #10.

Page 48: Brain Rules for Presenters

Brain Rule #1

Page 49: Brain Rules for Presenters

Exercise boosts brain powerRule #1

Page 50: Brain Rules for Presenters

and yet...

Page 51: Brain Rules for Presenters

What are some examplesof perfect “anti-brain”

environments today?according to Dr. Medina

Page 52: Brain Rules for Presenters

Classroom picLecture hallthe

Page 53: Brain Rules for Presenters

Classroom picLecture hallthe

Page 54: Brain Rules for Presenters

Classroomthe

Page 55: Brain Rules for Presenters

Classroom picThe office

Page 56: Brain Rules for Presenters

Classroom picThe office

Page 57: Brain Rules for Presenters

Whoa! Those are

scary environments!

Page 58: Brain Rules for Presenters

Whoa! Those are

scary environments!

How can you think in those spaces?

Page 59: Brain Rules for Presenters

There is no greater anti-brainenvironment than the classroom and cubicle.— Dr. John Medina

“”

Page 60: Brain Rules for Presenters

There is no greater anti-brainenvironment than the classroom and cubicle.“

”— Dr. John Medina

Amen, brother!

Page 61: Brain Rules for Presenters

Sure, you know exerciseis good for you...

Page 62: Brain Rules for Presenters

But exercise is not just good for general health, it actuallyimproves cognition.

Page 63: Brain Rules for Presenters

But exercise is not just good for general health, it actuallyimproves cognition.

Two reasons for this...

Page 64: Brain Rules for Presenters

Exercise increases oxygen flow into the brain, which reduces brain-bound free radicals...an increase in oxygenis always accompaniedby an uptick in mentalsharpness.”— Dr. John Medina

“1

Page 65: Brain Rules for Presenters

Exercise acts directly on the molecular machinery of the brain itself. It increases neurons’ creation,survival, and resistance to damage and stress.”— Dr. John Medina

“2

Page 66: Brain Rules for Presenters

Reduces Alzheimer’s

Improves long-termImproves reaso

ning

Helps you solve problems

Improves fluid

Reduces depression

Treats dementia

And more...

More brain benefits:

BENEFITS

intelligence

risk by 50%

memory

Page 67: Brain Rules for Presenters

What’s this have to do with presentations?

Two things...

Page 68: Brain Rules for Presenters

Passively sitting is a very unnatural thing. Audiences have no patience for tedium. Think of the presentation from your audienceʼspoint of view.

1

Page 69: Brain Rules for Presenters

During the preparation stage, if youʼre struggling with an idea, if youʼre stuck, then go for a walk, a run, just move...

2

Page 70: Brain Rules for Presenters

Evidence suggest we may even think better if we tossthe couch-potato lifestyle.

...we were born to move.

Page 71: Brain Rules for Presenters

Hmmm...Potato...

Evidence suggest we may even think better if we tossthe couch-potato lifestyle.

...we were born to move.

Page 72: Brain Rules for Presenters

Brain Rule #4

Page 73: Brain Rules for Presenters

We don’t pay

attention to

boring things

Rule #4

Page 74: Brain Rules for Presenters

Here’s something else important to

remember in the preparation stage:

Multitasking is a myth.

Page 75: Brain Rules for Presenters

Multitasking, when it comes to paying attention, is a myth.

“”— Dr. John Medina

Page 76: Brain Rules for Presenters

We are biologically incapable of processing attention-rich inputs simultaneously.

“”— Dr. John Medina

Page 77: Brain Rules for Presenters

Workus interruptus

Page 78: Brain Rules for Presenters

Take 50% longer to complete a task.Make 50% more errors.

People who are interrupted:

Page 79: Brain Rules for Presenters

Take 50% longer to complete a task.Make 50% more errors.

People who are interrupted:

You’d be more efficient without the interruptions

Page 80: Brain Rules for Presenters

Hey, being online is great, but

you’d be surprised how much of

your “being connected” is also

“being interrupted.”

Page 81: Brain Rules for Presenters

When you’re always online you’re always distracted. “ ”— Dr. John Medina

Page 82: Brain Rules for Presenters

So the always online organization is the always unproductive organization.

— Dr. John Medina

“”

Page 83: Brain Rules for Presenters

Yet, most presentations are put together while doing other things...

Is this you?

Page 84: Brain Rules for Presenters

Johnson! Where’s that presentation I asked for?!!!!

Page 85: Brain Rules for Presenters

Yes time is an issue, and

each case is different, but.

..

Page 86: Brain Rules for Presenters

If the presentation matters, you need time off the grid to prepare.

Page 87: Brain Rules for Presenters

If the presentation matters, you need time off the grid to prepare.

You might want to ditch the

computer too for a while...

Page 88: Brain Rules for Presenters

Try “going analog” and focusing only on the presentation in the prep stage.

Is this you?

Page 89: Brain Rules for Presenters

Big picture vs. details

Page 90: Brain Rules for Presenters

Structure your presentation around meaning, and the big picture. Then support key ideas with details.

Page 91: Brain Rules for Presenters

If you want to get the particulars correct, donʼt start with the details. Start with the key ideas and, in hierarchical fashion, form the detailsaround these larger notions.

“”— Dr. John Medina

Good advice, but how long can people pay attention to your talk?

Page 92: Brain Rules for Presenters

The brain needs a

break.

Page 93: Brain Rules for Presenters

If keeping someone’s attention in a lecture was a business, it would have an 80% failure rate.

“”— Dr. John Medina

Page 94: Brain Rules for Presenters

After 10 minutes, audience attention steadily drops.

Page 95: Brain Rules for Presenters

Minutes of class time

10 20 30 40 50

High

Low

Attention

The 10-minute rule

Source: www.brainrules.net/attention

Page 96: Brain Rules for Presenters

So do something emotionally relevant at each 10-minute mark to regain attention.

Page 97: Brain Rules for Presenters

Dr. Medina suggests changing gears every 10 minutes in your presentation (lecture, etc.). Tell a relevant story, show a relevant video, do a relevant activity, etc.

Page 98: Brain Rules for Presenters

One more thing about attention...

Page 99: Brain Rules for Presenters

We’re wired to notice patterns

Page 100: Brain Rules for Presenters

Chunking example

IRSYMCAWTFIBMKGBFBI

At first those letter won’t make sense...

But eventually you’ll recognize chunks you’ve seen before.

Page 101: Brain Rules for Presenters

Chunking example

IRSYMCAWTFIBMKGBFBI

Of course, graphic design can help you see the chunks...

Adapted from: www.brainrules.net/attention

Page 102: Brain Rules for Presenters

The brain pays attention to patterns. Remembering some-thing we’ve seen before (like quick-sand) is a useful evolutionary trait.

”— Dr. John Medina

Page 103: Brain Rules for Presenters

What’s the most common communication mistake?

according to Dr. Medina

Page 104: Brain Rules for Presenters

Relating too much information, with not enough time devoted to connecting the dots. Lots of force feeding, very little digestion.

“”— Dr. John Medina

Page 105: Brain Rules for Presenters

The brain doesn’t pay attention to boring things, and I am as sick of boring presentations as you are.

“”— Dr. John Medina

Page 106: Brain Rules for Presenters

Brain Rule #10

Page 107: Brain Rules for Presenters

Vision trumps

all other sensesRule #10

Page 108: Brain Rules for Presenters

Fact: we have

better recall for

visual information

Page 109: Brain Rules for Presenters

We are incredible at remembering pictures.

Page 110: Brain Rules for Presenters

Hear a piece of information, and three days later you’ll remember 10% of it.

Page 111: Brain Rules for Presenters

Add a picture and you’ll remember 65%.

Page 112: Brain Rules for Presenters

Oral 10%

Visual

Oral &Visual

35%

65%

6x

Source: Najjar, LJ (1998) Principles of educational multimedia user interface design (via Brain Rules by John Medina, 2008)

Rule of thumb

3x

Page 113: Brain Rules for Presenters

Why is vision such a big deal to us? Perhaps because it’s how we’ve always apprehended major threats, food supplies and reproductive opportunity.

”— Dr. John Medina

Page 114: Brain Rules for Presenters

Why is vision such a big deal to us? Perhaps because it’s how we’ve always apprehended major threats, food supplies and reproductive opportunity.

”— Dr. John Medina

Can I eat it? Will it eat me? Can I mate with it? Will it mate with me? Have I seen it before?

Page 115: Brain Rules for Presenters

Pictures beat text

Page 116: Brain Rules for Presenters

Recognition soars with pictures

0% 50% 100%

pictures only

text only

source: www.brainrules.net/vision

Various studies show that recognition doubles for a picture compared with text.“ ”— Dr. John Medina

Page 117: Brain Rules for Presenters

Pictures beat text...because reading is so inefficient for us. We have to identify certain features in the letters to be able to read them. That takes time.

“” — Dr. John Medina

Page 118: Brain Rules for Presenters

So what have we learned?

Page 119: Brain Rules for Presenters

Let’s see those three rules again...

Page 120: Brain Rules for Presenters

Rule #1Exercise boosts brain power.

Rule #4We don’t pay attention to boring things.

Rule #10 Vision trumps all other senses.

Page 121: Brain Rules for Presenters

Review

Page 122: Brain Rules for Presenters

Rule #1Exercise boosts brain power.

Review✓ Our brains were built for walking/moving!

✓ To improve your thinking skills, move!

✓ Exercise gets blood to the brain, bringing it glucose and oxygen.

✓ Aerobic exercise 2x/week halves the risk of general dementia, reduces risk of Alzheimer’s by 60%.

✓ Exercise is just about the best thing you can do for yourself says Dr. Medina.

Page 123: Brain Rules for Presenters

Rule #4We don’t pay attention to boring things.

✓ No multitasking. When it comes to attention, it’s only one thing at a time.

✓ We are better at seeing patterns, abstracting meaning than recording details.

✓ Tapping people’s emotions helps them learn.

✓ People start to fade after 10 minutes. Get them back by telling stories, examples, and targeting their emotions.

Review

Page 124: Brain Rules for Presenters

Review✓ Vision is our dominant sense, using half ofthe brain’s resources.

✓We learn/remember best through picturescompared to text or spoken words.

✓Try to communicate more with pictures.

✓Toss your current PowerPoint slides.

Rule #10 Vision trumps all other senses.

Page 125: Brain Rules for Presenters

What do these 3 rules mean for the

world of presentation? And for the

world of work and school in general?

Question:

All 12 rules at a glance

Page 127: Brain Rules for Presenters

John Medina’s 12 Brain rules

>

Page 130: Brain Rules for Presenters

These slides were produced by Garr Reynolds in his home in Osaka Japan. Software used was Apple’s Keynote (but PowerPoint would’ve done the trick as well) and a bit of Photoshop.

GARR REYNOLDS www.presentationzen.com

Checkout the PZ website!

These slides were produced by

Garr Reynolds

in his home in Osaka, Japan. Software used

was Apple’s Keynote (but PowerPoint

would’ve

done the trick as well) and a b

it of Photoshop.

GARR REYNOLDS www.presentationzen.com

Checkout the PZ website!

Page 131: Brain Rules for Presenters

These slides were produced by Garr Reynolds in his home in Osaka Japan. Software used was Apple’s Keynote (but PowerPoint would’ve done the trick as well) and a bit of Photoshop.

GARR REYNOLDS www.presentationzen.com

Checkout the PZ website!

どうもありがとうDomo Arigatou