Pecha Kucha Presentation

Pecha Kucha Presentation

Lane 1 Assessment

Students deliver structured visual presentations using timed slides to develop concise communication and creative thinking skills.

Overview

Pecha Kucha presentations require students to deliver precisely timed visual presentations using a format named after the Japanese term meaning “chitchat” or conversational chatter. The format uses exactly 20 slides, each displayed for 20 seconds with automatic advancement (totalling 6 minutes 40 seconds). This constraint-based approach develops concise communication skills, creative thinking, and disciplinary understanding through structured visual storytelling within fixed time parameters.

Key features

How it works

Curtin snapshot   

Ruth Taylor
Case Study

Ruth Taylor

“The Pecha Kucha format propels students to think critically about what’s truly essential in their event concept. They can’t hide behind excessive text or rambling explanations on mobile screens – every slide and every second must contribute to a compelling story that demonstrates their understanding of event management principles”

Faculty of Business and Law

Ruth’s example assessment

Business and Law | 50-100 students | In-person | Group work

I redesigned our event concept presentation in MGMT3005 using the Pecha Kucha format to address previous issues around unequal participation and overly lengthy presentations. Student groups must develop creative festival concepts for the University’s Creative Quarter, then present their 20 slides, with 20 seconds to cover each.

The Pecha Kucha format creates remarkable learning outcomes. Groups must collaboratively develop visual narratives that demonstrate their ability to apply event management theory while maintaining audience-focused engagement throughout the short presentations. Each team member typically handles 5 slides, ensuring equal participation and assessment opportunities.

The automatic slide advancement eliminates the ability to overrun time and prevents unequal speaking contributions between group members. Students report that they feel challenged to identify core concepts rather than including every researched detail.

The visual emphasis is particularly effective for event management content, where concepts like atmosphere, target audiences, and spatial design benefit from image-driven communication. Groups develop stronger creative thinking skills because they must find innovative ways to convey complex theoretical frameworks through coordinated visual storytelling.

My advice 

Learning content works best when students focus on narrative-driven concepts that can be visualised rather than data-heavy or text-dependent material. Topics involving processes, pitches, relationships, creative concepts, or case studies adapt well to the format, while complex statistical analysis or detailed theoretical explanations may prove challenging using creative visual representation and within the time constraints.

Each slide should advance the narrative rather than cramming multiple concepts together. Encourage students to practice the “one image, one idea” principle and to view their presentation as visual storytelling rather than only information delivery. The most successful presentations treat slides as prompts for spoken content rather than attempting to display comprehensive information visually.

For event management, this format reinforces the concept of creating a memorable experience.

Suggested marking criteria

Note: Marking criteria and weighting are suggested guidelines. Specific descriptions should be adapted to relevant content and learning objectives.