Saturday, September 11, 2010

Digital Storytelling (Module 5)

Pod, Vods, Videos and Web 2.0

We were asked to explore iTunes and visit videos sites such as YouTube.
 
Internally, I remain skeptical about the necessity for everyone to blog about everything. Particularly when people are exploring and their depth of understanding is evolving. My fear is that the confident with pollute the ether with misconception and superficial trite whilst the truly knowledgeable may hold back given all the rubbish currently freely available on the web. Maybe this blog post is the case in point. Even worse had I turned on the webcam and chose to share the message by way of a vodcast.
 
I've experimented with Vodcasting in the classroom and found it a great way to aid learning. Students have created such works as Newtons First Law - Recut, Prelim Chemistry Metals and Year 10 meets the Flip. Unfortunately these were hosted on TeacherTube and whilst my account still survives the video footage was lost by them during an upgrade (a lesson for us all there).
 
YouTube is fantastic for class for that 3-4 minute grab that might be used to engage, consolidate, pace or simply wind down a lesson. I really like the screened resources recommended by NeoK12. I keep some of the videos that I like collated in a group strangely enough called YouTube Videos I Like, with 128 videos favourited in my YouTube account. My students will all tell you that I like playing Gregorian Chants whilst they complete practicals.




Despite my earlier comments, I like the way Greg Whitby the Executive Director of Schools of the Parramatta Catholic Education uses YouTube. See below an example from Greg's site.




Prof Stephen Heppell is an informed and revolutionary educator. The work put up by my students on TeacherTube was strewn with misconception. There is also the wealth of information being made available as opencourseware. I particularly like the free nnline course materials made available at MIT OpenCourseWare and the professional development potential of Teachers.TV a rich source of education video resources, lesson plans, inspiration and ideas to use in classroom.

We need to ensure that our students are armed with the skills to discern whether the information presented is from a credible source and likely to be correct, but that will be the subject of a later post.

1 comment:

  1. Great clips. Just one question...How do you deal with transitions when showing short clips ie. how do you get the students back on track when you have shown them a particularly exciting video clips?

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