Creating an instructor guide from a PowerPoint deck.
I recently came across the situation where I had several PowerPoint decks that were
VERY well documented. Essentially, each slide had reams of notes in the Notes
panel of the deck. This is both good and bad. It was good because for
preparation purposes, it was very easy to review the notes as you reviewed the slides.
It was bad because on many machines where I presented from, you could not split the
monitors so the slides were on one machine and the notes were on another.
This presented a conundrum because it’s nice to be able to have the notes handy as
I present the material. That way, I can refer back to the main bullets to make
sure I covered everything before moving on. For other workshops I teach, we
have an instructor guide on paper that you can have up next to your presenter machine
on the podium and all is good to go.
Unfortunately, there was nothing like that setup already for this workshop.
Fortunately, PowerPoint 2007 provides a feature to export your presentation to Word
2007. Full steps are located here but
essentially you are looking for this screen:
This is a nice solution but the main problem that I had is that it embeds PowerPoint
objects into the slide deck. This *sounds* like a good idea but it grows the
file size of the document to a huge degree. For example, one deck had 36 slides
and the file size of the resulting Word document was >50MB!
Fortunately, with some nice VBA code, you can do the following:
1.
Iterate through every shape in the document.
2.
Copy the PowerPoint object.
3.
Paste that object as a JPEG.
4.
Delete the PowerPoint object.
That brings the file size back down to where it should be, from my perspective.
For example, in that file I mentioned previously, it brought the size down from 55MB
to 642KB. Talk about a tremendous improvement!
The VBA code to use is as follows:
1: Sub ConvertPowerPointToImage()
2:
3: Dim j As InlineShape
4: For Each j In Word.ActiveDocument.InlineShapes
5: j.Select
6: Selection.Copy
7: Selection.PasteSpecialLink:=False, _
8: DataType:=15,
9: Placement:=wdInLine,
10: DisplayAsIcon:=False
11: j.Delete
12: Next j
13: End Sub
Just copy/paste the above code into a new module. Then execute the “ConvertPowerPointToImage”
macro. That will clean everything up and make the file a lot more manageable.
Enjoy!