Educational Presentation Design
Transform any presentation into a cognitively-optimized learning tool based on evidence from learning science.
Core Philosophy: Minimize Cognitive Load
Prime Directive: Every design decision must serve learning by:
- Reducing extraneous load (eliminate distractions)
- Managing intrinsic load (chunk complex content)
- Optimizing germane load (maximize mental resources for actual learning)
Critical Rule: If a design element doesn't directly support learning, remove it.
Essential Principles (Non-Negotiable)
Mayer's 3 Most Critical Principles
1. Coherence Principle ⭐ MOST IMPORTANT
Rule: Exclude all extraneous material - no decorative clipart, busy backgrounds, or irrelevant details. Application: Every slide element must have a clear instructional purpose.
2. Redundancy Principle ⭐ CRITICAL
Rule: Do NOT put paragraphs of text on slides that will be read aloud. Why: Creates "cognitive channel war" - audience can't read and listen simultaneously. Solution:
- Visuals + narration = GOOD ✅
- Visuals + text wall + narration = COGNITIVE OVERLOAD ❌
- Move all paragraph text to speaker notes
- Slides should have: keywords, graphics, or charts only
3. Segmenting Principle ⭐ ESSENTIAL
Rule: Break content into user-paced chunks using progressive disclosure or multiple slides. Application: Never overwhelm with one dense slide - chunk across 3-5 slides instead.
For all 12 Mayer principles with detailed applications, read references/quick-reference.md.
Macro-Structure: Gagné's 9 Events Framework
Every educational presentation MUST follow this structure:
Event 1: Gain Attention
- Thought-provoking question, surprising statistic, or compelling case study
- Stimulates curiosity and focus
Event 2: Inform Learners of Objectives
- "By the end of this session, you will be able to..."
- Use measurable action verbs (Analyze, Compare, Apply, Evaluate, Create)
Event 3: Stimulate Recall of Prior Learning
- Poll question: "What do you already know about X?"
- Activates existing knowledge as foundation
Event 4: Present the Content
- Main content slides with visuals + narration (not text walls)
- Break into digestible 3-5 minute chunks
- Apply progressive disclosure
Event 5: Provide Learning Guidance
- Worked examples, non-examples, analogies, case studies
- Graphic organizers and mnemonics
Event 6: Elicit Performance
- "Try this problem" or "Discuss with your neighbor"
- Interactive quiz or application exercise (non-graded)
Event 7: Provide Feedback
- Correct answer with explanation
- Model of ideal response and common mistakes to avoid
Event 8: Assess Performance
- Formal quiz, project prompt, or final presentation request
- Measures if objective was met
Event 9: Enhance Retention and Transfer
- Final summary and transfer question: "How will you use this in your work?"
- Real-world problem to solve
For detailed templates for each event, read references/slide-templates.md.
Micro-Design: C.R.A.P. Principles
1. Contrast
Create visual hierarchy with strong differences:
- Large title (36-44pt) vs. smaller body (24-32pt)
- Bright accent color on neutral background
- Bold vs. regular weight
2. Repetition
Reuse same fonts, colors, and layouts:
- Consistent title placement
- Same color palette on every slide
- Maximum 2 fonts for entire deck
3. Alignment
Nothing is placed arbitrarily:
- Use invisible grid (turn on guides)
- Left-align body text (never center paragraphs)
- Connect every element to another
4. Proximity
Group related items close together:
- Place labels directly next to graphics
- Use whitespace to separate unrelated groups
For detailed C.R.A.P. applications, read references/quick-reference.md.
Typography & Color Essentials
Typography Rules
- Font Choice: Sans-serif only (Arial, Calibri, Verdana, Helvetica)
- Size: Main Title 36-44pt, Body Text 24-32pt minimum
- Alignment: Left-align all body text, never center
- Emphasis: Use bold, never underline or ALL CAPS
Color Strategy
60-30-10 Rule:
- 60% Primary (neutral background: white, off-white, dark gray)
- 30% Secondary (structural elements: title bars, sidebars)
- 10% Accent (key words, buttons, arrows - bright, contrasting)
Accessibility (WCAG 2.1 AA):
- 4.5:1 contrast ratio for normal text
- 3:1 contrast ratio for large text (18pt+)
- Never use red/green or blue/yellow combinations
Tools: WebAIM Contrast Checker, Adobe Color, Coolors
Visual Elements & Multimedia
Images & Icons
- ✅ High-quality, relevant photographs
- ✅ Professional icons (Noun Project, Flaticon, Iconoir)
- ✅ Icons can replace bullet points
- ❌ No decorative clipart or "seductive details"
Charts & Diagrams
- Simplify to one clear message per chart
- Use progressive disclosure for complex diagrams
- Label directly on elements (not separate legend)
Free Legal Resources:
- Images: Unsplash, Wikimedia Commons
- Icons: Noun Project, Flaticon, Iconoir
Progressive Disclosure & Animations
When to Use
- 3+ bullet points or list items
- Complex diagrams or processes
- Step-by-step explanations
How to Implement
PowerPoint: Animations > Add Animation > Appear > Effect Options: On Click Google Slides: Insert > Animation > Appear/Fade In > On Click
Critical Rules:
- Use "Appear" or "Fade" only (no distracting effects)
- Set to "On Click" not "After Previous"
- Build diagrams piece-by-piece
Accessibility (WCAG 2.1 AA)
Must-Have Requirements
- Alt text on all images and charts
- Contrast meets 4.5:1 ratio (verify with tools)
- Built-in layouts (don't use text boxes floating arbitrarily)
- Reading order checked and corrected
- Color independence (don't rely on color alone for meaning)
Tools
PowerPoint: File > Info > Check for Issues > Check Accessibility Google Slides: Grackle Slides add-on
For complete accessibility checklist, read references/validation.md.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
❌ The Bullet Point Slide of Death
Problem: 8+ bullet points with full sentences, presented all at once Fix: Chunk across 3-4 slides, one clear message per slide, use progressive disclosure
❌ The Text Wall
Problem: Paragraphs of text on slide while presenter reads aloud Fix: Move ALL paragraph text to speaker notes, leave only keywords/graphics
❌ The Clipart Catastrophe
Problem: Generic clipart that doesn't illustrate the concept Fix: Use high-quality, relevant photographs or professional icons
❌ The Overwhelming Diagram
Problem: Complex flowchart revealed all at once Fix: Build piece-by-piece using progressive disclosure
❌ The Centered Everything
Problem: All text centered on slide Fix: Left-align all body text, use invisible grid
For detailed before/after transformations, read references/before-after.md.
Workflow: Creating a Presentation
Step 1: Plan the Structure (5-10 minutes)
- Define learning objectives (measurable action verbs)
- Outline using Gagné's 9 Events framework
- Identify key concepts that need pre-training
- Plan practice opportunities and feedback
Step 2: Create Content Slides (30-60 minutes)
- Start with slide titles (one clear idea per slide)
- Add relevant visuals first (not as decoration)
- Add minimal text (keywords only, not sentences)
- Write detailed speaker notes (what you'll say)
- Apply C.R.A.P. principles consistently
Step 3: Implement Progressive Disclosure (10-20 minutes)
- Identify slides with 3+ items
- Add "Appear" animations set to "On Click"
- Test flow and timing