karuru
Commie Cincinnatus
It's time to YEET the rich
Posts: 13,585
CIR Experience: Former CIR
Location: Tokyo
Gender (Pronouns): he/him/his
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Post by karuru on Jul 6, 2016 10:10:09 GMT 9
Posting again in the work-related thread, wow I am so SIKKALI!
This time I'm hoping to get some advice from people who are doing/have done retrospective presentations on their experience as CIRs. I'm planning my final 講座 and would like to do some kind of retrospective/感想 on my experience and stuff but I have no idea where to start or what kind of things I could/should be presenting on.
I've considered doing a kind of chronological thing where I just talk about how I came here, what it was like when I first arrived, etc. etc. until the present, listing significant events and stuff that I did for work or for extracurriculars, but idk if that would be good or what.
If you've done/are doing something like this, what angle did you take and how did it go (if you already did one)?
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Post by snell_mouse on Jul 6, 2016 10:18:30 GMT 9
That seems fine? The only thing similar I have done is a pechakucha of 15-seconds per slide for I think 5 slides? Or something (help songbanana haha) and that was basically the way I went about it. That said my pechakucha presentation was not very しっかりした so I'm not sure if that will become 参考。
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Post by songbanana on Jul 6, 2016 10:33:50 GMT 9
omg snell_mouse shut up your pechakucha was perfect So karuru basically what we do in Chiba, is the leaving people do what's called a pechakucha presentation. Here is the 説明 sent out to JETs: In reality, the presentation is supposed to tell a story of your time on JET, trace some themes throughout your experience, and have you give prepared remarks while pictures reflecting those themes/illustrating your story transition in the background. For example, we've had people talk about realizing the importance of building a community with pictures of said community, or learning about themselves and their skill sets and dreams with pictures of those things they learned how to do. This is much more interesting than the other direction the presentations sometimes take, which is "I went here and I did this". This doesn't teach the listener anything about the person presenting, and doesn't give them a lesson or inspiration to take away for their own lives. So less about chronologically what happened to you, and more "how you changed/what was important to you"--at least, for the presentations that we do. I hope that is helpful and I can give more info if you're interested!
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Post by snell_mouse on Jul 6, 2016 10:43:52 GMT 9
For example, we've had people talk about realizing the importance of building a community with pictures of said community, or learning about themselves and their skill sets and dreams with pictures of those things they learned how to do. This is much more interesting than the other direction the presentations sometimes take, which is "I went here and I did this". This doesn't teach the listener anything about the person presenting, and doesn't give them a lesson or inspiration to take away for their own lives. So less about chronologically what happened to you, and more "how you changed/what was important to you"--at least, for the presentations that we do. I'm pretty sure I just did this hahaha.
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karuru
Commie Cincinnatus
It's time to YEET the rich
Posts: 13,585
CIR Experience: Former CIR
Location: Tokyo
Gender (Pronouns): he/him/his
|
Post by karuru on Jul 6, 2016 11:20:04 GMT 9
hmm I like the idea of that but my presentation is supposed to be like 30-45min, so that might be a bit too concise? I personally would prefer to do it that way but it doesn't really fit the format. I can still go with the "use a bunch of pictures" thing though.
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Post by songbanana on Jul 6, 2016 11:23:37 GMT 9
I suppose it's too concise for your purposes but maybe it could give you direction on what kinds of 反省 would interest your audience!
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