MS-POWERPOINT
Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
153
Microsoft PowerPoint Tutorial
You will learn the following:
Lesson 1. Getting started, selecting slide templates, slide master
2. Creating slides in slide view and outline view
3. Creating graphics and graphs
4. Inserting images, clipart and movies
5. Builds, transitions and onscreen shows
Helpful hints for PowerPoint users
Special notes
If you do not have your own copy of PowerPoint:
• The Department of Biochemistry currently has three general use Macintosh computers in
room 302 of the Biochemistry Addition. They are available to all Biochemistry students
via fob access.
• DoIT maintains a list of computer labs on campus that are open to all students. You can
view the list at http://www.doit.wisc.edu/computerlabs/labs.asp.
• If you would like to purchase Microsoft PowerPoint, it is available at a substantial
discount from DoIT ($81) as part of the Microsoft Office Suite, see
http://wiscsoftware.wisc.edu/wisc/.
Need more help?
The Media Lab staff in rm 401 is there to help. They can teach you how to make, or consult and
help you make, or completely create your PowerPoint talk for you. You can find out more
information on the web at http://www.biochem.wisc.edu/medialab. The Media Lab’s web site
contains many “How to’s” on popular problems you will run in to as you create your PowerPoint
presentations, Posters and Research articles.
Ready to give your talk?
The Biochemistry auditoriums in rooms 175 & B1118, have built-in computers. These Macintosh
computers have drives for floppies, CDs, zip discs, pen drives, and are also on the Department’s
network. Feel free to bring your personal laptop in and connect it to the built-in projection system in
either of these rooms. Remember, to be safe, test your talk IN ADVANCE of your presentation
date. The rooms are fob accessible.
Whenever you intend to “show” your presentation on a computer other than the one it is developed
on, it is a good idea to place a copy of the file, AND a copy of any included movies, into a special
transfer folder, then use that folder to move the files to the second computer.
• Place a folder called “Movies” in the same transfer folder as your presentation.
• Place the movies you want to include into this “Movies” folder.
• Use the Insert/Movies mode of PPT to place those movies into your presentation.
• Now, when you move the transfer folder to any other computer, a copy of each required movie
goes too, AND, they are in a folder (relative path) that your presentation can recognize and use. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
154
Note:
The images and screen dumps throughout this tutorial are from Microsoft Office X on a Macintosh.
The specific screens you see on YOUR computer will depend upon the version of PPT you are
running and the current preference settings… Don’t panic! The menus and options are pretty much
similar for any PPT version on Mac and PC.
For security reasons, the computers in rooms 175 and B1118 do not appear on the Macintosh
Chooser Appletalk menu. Instead, there is a separate server called “Maitre d” in the Biochemistry
AppleTalk zone. Log on as “guest” via the chooser (no username or password required), or as
“maitred.biochem.wisc.edu” via ftp (username: transfer, password: bioshow). Place a copy of your
transfer folder (label with your name, please!) into the “pub” subdirectory of this server. You can
retrieve it onto the auditorium Mac before your presentation. OR… go directly to one of the
auditoriums and link to your computer from there and then transfer your files. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
155
Key point: PPT can “work” with text in several different modes. If text is added into the title
object box (“click to add title”), the program will forever recognize the particular information you
placed on this slide as a “title object”, which means that it and all other similar title objects can be
collectively and uniformly formatted by the Master Slide (see below). Likewise, any outline text
added to the “body object” box (“click to add text”) can be collectively formatted for style, color,
bullets, etc, on the master slide.
Lesson 1. Getting started Master & Template
1) Open PowerPoint.
Double click on the HardDrive folder icon
Double click on the Applications folder then the Microsoft Office X folder
Double click on the Microsoft PowerPoint program
2) Starting a new
presentation. When you first
open PPT, the program will
show you the project gallery,
choose PowerPoint and a blank
presentation will open.
3) Selecting a slide
layout. The next window to
pop up will ask you about the
general layout of the slides that
you wish to use in this
presentation. Although there are
many options here (title slides,
slides with or without additional
text, slides with graphs, slides with clipart, etc) don’t let this bother you! Any particular slide can be
changed later, and you can insert images, graphs, or movies at any stage on any kind of slide. You
can see all 24 possible layouts by scrolling within this dialogue box.
Select a generic slide layout with title and text called “Bulleted List”, as shown above.
Click on the indicated slide template, then click OK. The chosen slide (blank) will now fill your
screen.
Note: depending upon how PPT is configured
when first installed, and the settings in the PPT
customize folder (Tools/customize), the various
toolbars and menus may look different from
platform to platform.
Don’t panic! All PPT functions are available
somewhere in the menus and toolbars, you may
just have to hunt a bit to find them. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
156
Contextual Menus are little menus that pop up when you click the mouse to show you many
useful shortcuts. The Menu changes to fit whatever you click on.
Windows users: The “right-click” on a Windows computer is achieved by clicking and holding
down the control key on a Macintosh.
Macintosh users: Start using the second mouse button! Hold down the control key and click on
something with the mouse. You will find many useful shortcuts!
4) Use the Master Slide!!! You may set the background color, text size, font and style for each
slide in your presentation by using the various menus at the top of the screen but it is much easier to
pick a common format by specifying your preferences on the Master slide. This format will
automatically be followed for all slides in your presentation, unless you turn it off for particular
slides or chose to change any elements for a particular slide.
Choose the “View” menu, then “Master” then “Slide
Master”
Choose the “Format” menu, and then explore the
various options in the “Master layout”, “Slide color
scheme”, “Background” and “Apply design” menu.
Install any of these “looks” as your Master Slide, or
chose your own fonts, colors, backgrounds and styles
from among the many selections (e.g., Format menu,
Fonts). Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
157
Note: within a body box, the <rtn> key takes you to the next line, and also creates the bullet for the
next outline entry. If you ended up with an extra bullet, place the cursor after it, then press the
delete key.
Lesson 2. Creating slides SlideView & OutlineView
The presentation you are going to create is one that you and your colleague, Christopher Columbus,
will use to convince Queen Isabella to finance your new venture, called New World Expeditions.
There are three views one can use to create PPT slides: Normal, Outline and Slide. In Slide View you
see one slide at a time as you type the text and draw the graphics. In Outline view you see the outline
of all the text on your slide. In Normal View, you see the outline, the slide and a place for speaker
notes.
1) Return to the first blank slide in your presentation (NOT the Master slide), by clicking on
the Slide icon in the views button in the lower left corner of your screen (or select Slides from the
View menu)
2) Type the title of the first slide into the title box
Click in the title box, then type: We must act soon
Click inside the Body text box, then type the following short list, pressing return as indicated:
Favorable weather <rtn>
Increase in competition <rtn>
Available crew (don’t press <rtn>!)
Click anywhere outside of the body or title boxes to deselect them.
3) Save your work by choosing “Save” from the File menu, and selecting an appropriate file
name (e.g. Practice_1.ppt).
4) Now we will make 2 more slides from the Normal View. This method is a really slick
way to enter lots of nicely formatted text. You can easily use it to create a lot of slides for a lecture. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
158
Note: when you press return in Outline View, PPT moves to the next line, and keeps you at the
same level in the outline in which you were working (in this case, since you are at the title level,
PPT presents the new slide icon, and is ready for you to type a new title).
Note: Option + <rtn> is equivalent to the “Promote” button. If you had just hit return at this
point, you could have added more bullets to slide 2, but now you are ready to begin slide 3,
instead.
Choose Normal from the View menu, or click the Normal icon in the lower left corner of the
screen.
Now click the New Slide button, or select New Slide from the Insert menu. This will create
another “slide icon” in your outline and place the cursor next to it.
Type the title of slide 2: Expedition plan then press <rtn>
Click the “Demote” arrow (see image), to indent, or demote one level in the outline.
Type the two bullet items:
Prepare a fleet of three ships <rtn>
Hand-select a staff of able officers and sailors (press Option + <rtn>)
Type in the following title for slide 3: Benefits to Spain <rtn>
Now press the Tab key to indent one level and type the following the same way you typed the
bulleted items above. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
159
Note: The Tab key is the keyboard equivalent of the “demote” function
Significant rise in trade <rtn>
More revenue for the crown (don’t press <rtn>!)
Your outline should look something like this.
5) Go back to Slide view to see the new slides you have made. If you click on the thick doublearrow icons at lower right of screen, you can shuffle back and forth among your slides.
6) Reordering slides in SlideSorter view.
Click on the SlideSorter icon (lower left), or select SlideSorter from the View menu.
Click on the picture of slide 3, hold down the mouse button and drag this slide to position 2 of
your presentation. Note how the slide content remains exactly the same but the slide order is now
different.
153
Microsoft PowerPoint Tutorial
You will learn the following:
Lesson 1. Getting started, selecting slide templates, slide master
2. Creating slides in slide view and outline view
3. Creating graphics and graphs
4. Inserting images, clipart and movies
5. Builds, transitions and onscreen shows
Helpful hints for PowerPoint users
Special notes
If you do not have your own copy of PowerPoint:
• The Department of Biochemistry currently has three general use Macintosh computers in
room 302 of the Biochemistry Addition. They are available to all Biochemistry students
via fob access.
• DoIT maintains a list of computer labs on campus that are open to all students. You can
view the list at http://www.doit.wisc.edu/computerlabs/labs.asp.
• If you would like to purchase Microsoft PowerPoint, it is available at a substantial
discount from DoIT ($81) as part of the Microsoft Office Suite, see
http://wiscsoftware.wisc.edu/wisc/.
Need more help?
The Media Lab staff in rm 401 is there to help. They can teach you how to make, or consult and
help you make, or completely create your PowerPoint talk for you. You can find out more
information on the web at http://www.biochem.wisc.edu/medialab. The Media Lab’s web site
contains many “How to’s” on popular problems you will run in to as you create your PowerPoint
presentations, Posters and Research articles.
Ready to give your talk?
The Biochemistry auditoriums in rooms 175 & B1118, have built-in computers. These Macintosh
computers have drives for floppies, CDs, zip discs, pen drives, and are also on the Department’s
network. Feel free to bring your personal laptop in and connect it to the built-in projection system in
either of these rooms. Remember, to be safe, test your talk IN ADVANCE of your presentation
date. The rooms are fob accessible.
Whenever you intend to “show” your presentation on a computer other than the one it is developed
on, it is a good idea to place a copy of the file, AND a copy of any included movies, into a special
transfer folder, then use that folder to move the files to the second computer.
• Place a folder called “Movies” in the same transfer folder as your presentation.
• Place the movies you want to include into this “Movies” folder.
• Use the Insert/Movies mode of PPT to place those movies into your presentation.
• Now, when you move the transfer folder to any other computer, a copy of each required movie
goes too, AND, they are in a folder (relative path) that your presentation can recognize and use. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
154
Note:
The images and screen dumps throughout this tutorial are from Microsoft Office X on a Macintosh.
The specific screens you see on YOUR computer will depend upon the version of PPT you are
running and the current preference settings… Don’t panic! The menus and options are pretty much
similar for any PPT version on Mac and PC.
For security reasons, the computers in rooms 175 and B1118 do not appear on the Macintosh
Chooser Appletalk menu. Instead, there is a separate server called “Maitre d” in the Biochemistry
AppleTalk zone. Log on as “guest” via the chooser (no username or password required), or as
“maitred.biochem.wisc.edu” via ftp (username: transfer, password: bioshow). Place a copy of your
transfer folder (label with your name, please!) into the “pub” subdirectory of this server. You can
retrieve it onto the auditorium Mac before your presentation. OR… go directly to one of the
auditoriums and link to your computer from there and then transfer your files. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
155
Key point: PPT can “work” with text in several different modes. If text is added into the title
object box (“click to add title”), the program will forever recognize the particular information you
placed on this slide as a “title object”, which means that it and all other similar title objects can be
collectively and uniformly formatted by the Master Slide (see below). Likewise, any outline text
added to the “body object” box (“click to add text”) can be collectively formatted for style, color,
bullets, etc, on the master slide.
Lesson 1. Getting started Master & Template
1) Open PowerPoint.
Double click on the HardDrive folder icon
Double click on the Applications folder then the Microsoft Office X folder
Double click on the Microsoft PowerPoint program
2) Starting a new
presentation. When you first
open PPT, the program will
show you the project gallery,
choose PowerPoint and a blank
presentation will open.
3) Selecting a slide
layout. The next window to
pop up will ask you about the
general layout of the slides that
you wish to use in this
presentation. Although there are
many options here (title slides,
slides with or without additional
text, slides with graphs, slides with clipart, etc) don’t let this bother you! Any particular slide can be
changed later, and you can insert images, graphs, or movies at any stage on any kind of slide. You
can see all 24 possible layouts by scrolling within this dialogue box.
Select a generic slide layout with title and text called “Bulleted List”, as shown above.
Click on the indicated slide template, then click OK. The chosen slide (blank) will now fill your
screen.
Note: depending upon how PPT is configured
when first installed, and the settings in the PPT
customize folder (Tools/customize), the various
toolbars and menus may look different from
platform to platform.
Don’t panic! All PPT functions are available
somewhere in the menus and toolbars, you may
just have to hunt a bit to find them. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
156
Contextual Menus are little menus that pop up when you click the mouse to show you many
useful shortcuts. The Menu changes to fit whatever you click on.
Windows users: The “right-click” on a Windows computer is achieved by clicking and holding
down the control key on a Macintosh.
Macintosh users: Start using the second mouse button! Hold down the control key and click on
something with the mouse. You will find many useful shortcuts!
4) Use the Master Slide!!! You may set the background color, text size, font and style for each
slide in your presentation by using the various menus at the top of the screen but it is much easier to
pick a common format by specifying your preferences on the Master slide. This format will
automatically be followed for all slides in your presentation, unless you turn it off for particular
slides or chose to change any elements for a particular slide.
Choose the “View” menu, then “Master” then “Slide
Master”
Choose the “Format” menu, and then explore the
various options in the “Master layout”, “Slide color
scheme”, “Background” and “Apply design” menu.
Install any of these “looks” as your Master Slide, or
chose your own fonts, colors, backgrounds and styles
from among the many selections (e.g., Format menu,
Fonts). Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
157
Note: within a body box, the <rtn> key takes you to the next line, and also creates the bullet for the
next outline entry. If you ended up with an extra bullet, place the cursor after it, then press the
delete key.
Lesson 2. Creating slides SlideView & OutlineView
The presentation you are going to create is one that you and your colleague, Christopher Columbus,
will use to convince Queen Isabella to finance your new venture, called New World Expeditions.
There are three views one can use to create PPT slides: Normal, Outline and Slide. In Slide View you
see one slide at a time as you type the text and draw the graphics. In Outline view you see the outline
of all the text on your slide. In Normal View, you see the outline, the slide and a place for speaker
notes.
1) Return to the first blank slide in your presentation (NOT the Master slide), by clicking on
the Slide icon in the views button in the lower left corner of your screen (or select Slides from the
View menu)
2) Type the title of the first slide into the title box
Click in the title box, then type: We must act soon
Click inside the Body text box, then type the following short list, pressing return as indicated:
Favorable weather <rtn>
Increase in competition <rtn>
Available crew (don’t press <rtn>!)
Click anywhere outside of the body or title boxes to deselect them.
3) Save your work by choosing “Save” from the File menu, and selecting an appropriate file
name (e.g. Practice_1.ppt).
4) Now we will make 2 more slides from the Normal View. This method is a really slick
way to enter lots of nicely formatted text. You can easily use it to create a lot of slides for a lecture. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
158
Note: when you press return in Outline View, PPT moves to the next line, and keeps you at the
same level in the outline in which you were working (in this case, since you are at the title level,
PPT presents the new slide icon, and is ready for you to type a new title).
Note: Option + <rtn> is equivalent to the “Promote” button. If you had just hit return at this
point, you could have added more bullets to slide 2, but now you are ready to begin slide 3,
instead.
Choose Normal from the View menu, or click the Normal icon in the lower left corner of the
screen.
Now click the New Slide button, or select New Slide from the Insert menu. This will create
another “slide icon” in your outline and place the cursor next to it.
Type the title of slide 2: Expedition plan then press <rtn>
Click the “Demote” arrow (see image), to indent, or demote one level in the outline.
Type the two bullet items:
Prepare a fleet of three ships <rtn>
Hand-select a staff of able officers and sailors (press Option + <rtn>)
Type in the following title for slide 3: Benefits to Spain <rtn>
Now press the Tab key to indent one level and type the following the same way you typed the
bulleted items above. Information Technology Media Center | Department of Biochemistry | UW–Madison | Tutorials
159
Note: The Tab key is the keyboard equivalent of the “demote” function
Significant rise in trade <rtn>
More revenue for the crown (don’t press <rtn>!)
Your outline should look something like this.
5) Go back to Slide view to see the new slides you have made. If you click on the thick doublearrow icons at lower right of screen, you can shuffle back and forth among your slides.
6) Reordering slides in SlideSorter view.
Click on the SlideSorter icon (lower left), or select SlideSorter from the View menu.
Click on the picture of slide 3, hold down the mouse button and drag this slide to position 2 of
your presentation. Note how the slide content remains exactly the same but the slide order is now
different.