"ShowMaker" is a PDF drawn from the Internet Archive and catalogued under Arts, Music & Design for Undergraduate / College. From the source: This program allows you to quickly develop great looking slide shows and photo albums, to distribute CD, e-mail or on the Internet as HTML. It includes complex slides, thumb indexes, auto text, embedding copyright text,… Slide Collection preserves the upstream link, the original creator credit and the licensing terms; download the file to use it in a classroom, study group or revision plan.
About this presentation
This program allows you to quickly develop great looking slide shows and photo albums, to distribute CD, e-mail or on the Internet as HTML. It includes complex slides, thumb indexes, auto text, embedding copyright text, fast blend transition and audio. ShowMaker comes with a small, high-quality, royalty free stand-alone replayer, for disk or CD-ROM distribution, requiring no installation on the client machines. You can even have a slide show on CD start automatically when the CD is inserted.
How to study this deck
Arts decks teach by example. Don't just look at the works on each slide — describe them out loud in formal terms (composition, palette, line, rhythm) before reading the lecturer's analysis. Your description sharpens your eye.
Undergraduate viewers should treat this as a scaffolding for deeper reading — the slides outline the territory, but the textbook chapters and primary sources remain the actual content.
Five questions to test your understanding
- What is the single most important claim on the first three slides, and what evidence is offered for it?
- Which slide could you remove without losing the argument? Which slide is load-bearing?
- Where does the deck switch from definitions to applications? Mark that transition.
- What would a student who already disagreed with the conclusion need to see to be convinced?
- Which two slides, if combined, would give the clearest one-slide summary of the whole deck?
Where this deck fits in the wider catalogue
Slide Collection classifies this presentation under Arts, Music & Design, alongside other openly-licensed material in the same subject. If you are preparing a unit at the Undergraduate / College level, the dedicated combined Arts, Music & Design · Undergraduate / College page is the fastest way to find adjacent decks with the same audience in mind.
Citation & reuse
If you reuse material from this deck in your own teaching or coursework, please cite the original source on the Internet Archive and check the license attached to the file before redistribution. Slide Collection links to the upstream source on every detail page so the original creator and licensing terms are always one click away.