If you deliver moving and handling presentations as part of your daily routine, or even if it is just occasionally, you might want to take advantage of this offer.
When I started teaching this subject, I, like most of you, used acetates and an OHP (overhead projector). Then came PowerPoint and a whole new world opened up. For me, this was just the start of my technology addiction. I quickly realised the limitations of PowerPoint. It is very linear in its approach. For instance, have you ever moved on from a point only for a student to ask a question relating to a slide shown 20 minutes ago? Or maybe you would like to jump to a point that is 20 slides further on and then come back to where you are now. This can be done of course, but not without leaving your presentation, scrolling to where you want to be and starting up again, which looks very un professional and messy. In other words, unless you do things in the order that is in your presentation, you are stuffed. It doesn’t like you to change things about.
Not so with my 309 page presentation software which is currently in its 21st edition. You can go from legislation, to anatomy, to risk assessment or wherever you like with just a couple of clicks on the ever present navigation bar. For example, the Anatomy & Physiology section has 33 pages. You may have planned your lesson to utilise only the first 5 pages, but someone in your audience asks a question which you feel deserves an answer immediately. There is no need to exit the programme, simply select the page you want, deal with the issue, then get right back to your presentation. And, because all of the buttons are clearly labled, once you have taken the time to view the slides and know where everything is, you can go immediately to where you want to be without any scrolling involved.
Topics covered are Teaching, Perception, Statistics, UK Legislation, Duty of care, Abuse, Risk assessment, Theory Practice Gap, Diagnostics, Hoisting, Anatomy & Physiology and a 63 page quiz
I had a cut down version which I previously sold for £76, but this is the full version as used in my instructor programmes.
I have written an 8-page booklet to accompany the disc (on the CD) because there are little Easter eggs (computer geek speak for surprises) hidden around the place. I know where they are because I designed it, but someone else using the package wouldn’t know they were there. For instance, there is a page with a superior view of a healthy disc sitting on top of a vertebra. You can clearly see the concentric rings of the annulus and the nucleus nestled in the middle. You would know though, that if you move your mouse into the picture, the initial stages of a prolapse occurs. Click the left mouse button over it and a prolapse begins to occur, the right mouse click would make a full prolapse occur.
One of the 6 videos in the anatomy section. This one shows the interspinalis muscles
To purchase the presentation on CD for £20 including p&p to anywhere in the world Click the link below.
The booklet can be downloaded by clicking here