Early this month we finished our final TOK presentation. I did mine with Faizaan, and we chose to take up the subject of philanthropy. The real reason that people give in the first place is a very controversial and relevant topic, and so we thought it would make a good topic for a presentation. It was very important for us to be interested in the topic we were going to be presenting, as we would be spending so many hours doing work on it- we are both interested in business and aspire to become businessmen at some point in our lives and so we truly found this topic something we would find engaging.
I suggested that we break each concept down into the most elementary components and our interpretations of them, as when I saw some of the presentation of last year’s seniors it struck me how they were taking for granted that everyone had the same meaning of the most fundamental words in their presentation. Therefore, I made sure we spent a good amount of time building base for our presentation to build on by examining the concepts and differences in perceptions of the key words in our presentation, for example ‘giving,’ and ‘need. I really felt that this contributed to the coherence of our presentation and showed that we were not talking out of the air, but really had a firm grip on the concepts in our presentation. Another thing I found very monotonous last year was that everyone was presenting their information in the form of debates between two completely opposing viewpoints. Not only do I find this extremely boring, but I feel that it limits the scope of the presentation and does not allow us to really develop arguments and insights to a deeper level.
The Business plan on Principles Of Management Presentation Topics
Principles of Management Presentation Topics 1. Case of Dabbawalas of Mumbai and learnings from it 2. Rise of Samsung Galaxy – Strategies & Tactics 3. Strategic positioning of Coca – Cola in Global Market 4. SWOT Analysis of Nokia – Microsoft Merger 5. Management lessons from Mahabharata 6. General Electrics – Lessons in Strategic Management 7. Leadership lessons from famous leaders 8. ...
Instead, we utilized a format wherein each of us presented various viewpoints on the same topic and did not have to stick to a specific perspective. I really liked how this worked out for us in our final presentation. In our feedback, they said that this confused them, but we firmly believed that it was very clearly and explained to them why we chose the style which we did.
The examiners also suggested that we should have cut out some information as it was a bit rushed, but the information we included was as little as we could. Unlike some of the other presentations, ours was a bit more based on facts and figures, and we needed to include these to add credibility to what we were saying. In fact, we had researched much more than what we were able to include within the twenty minutes for the presentation, and this clearly showed when they asked us questions after the presentation was over. I did ot understand why they all seemed to have a problem with our knower’s perspectives and WOK’s being implicitly embedded, as this was clearly done intentionally- we felt that making a slide saying ‘Emotion in Giving,’ for example, could completely break the flow our presentation had. We did a lot of work on this presentation and we felt we were really successful in following the guidelines of the rubric. I personally learnt a lot about philanthropy myself and explored some perspectives that I would not have otherwise thought of- I have become much more critical when walking down the road and giving to beggars after this presentation.