social networking and screencasts: a powerful combination

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Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination Susan Currie Sivek, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Mass Communication and Journalism California State University, Fresno

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Slides and notes for presentation to the 13th CSU Symposium on University Teaching, April 24, 2010. More info on my blog at http://wp.me/psq2X-5H.

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Page 1: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Social  Networking  and  Screencasts:  

A  Powerful  Combination

Susan  Currie  Sivek,  Ph.D.Assistant  Professor

Mass  Communication  and  JournalismCalifornia  State  University,  Fresno

Page 2: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

GoalsFlickr user ewiemann

The goals of this presentation are...

Page 3: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Social  networkingFlickr user Marc_Smith

1) To introduce you to other sites for social networking beyond Facebook and Twitter2) To talk about ways they might be better for the classroom than Facebook or Twitter

Page 4: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

ScreencastsFlickr user Arbron

3) To show you how to combine social networking with screencasts (brief recordings of you explaining a topic or tool in conjunction with your computer screen’s display) in order to get students more engaged in their work and get them excited about your class.

Page 5: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Example:MCJ  10  Media  Writing  

@  Fresno  State

Here’s a little information about the course where I used this approach in Fall 2009. MCJ 10, Media Writing, is an introductory writing course enrolling about 20 students per section.

This was an experiment to try a non-Blackboard site to encourage more teamwork among students, and to help them feel more buy-in to the class.

I also wanted to provide more contemporary interactive and multimedia interface for students than Blackboard offers.

Page 6: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Social  Networking

*

*  see  epilogue...I chose to use Ning as our social networking tool. http://ning.com

It was free, though it did include advertising. This may be changing, as I’ll discuss in the epilogue to this presentation.

I chose Ning because I wanted a place to gather course materials, but also to encourage discussion of them directly. I wanted to embed videos directly into the class site, rather than having students leave Blackboard, etc., to locate multimedia. Essentially, I used Ning as a socially enabled course management site.

Ning is easy to design, and you can include videos, a forum, an event calendar (great for class deadlines), polls, and other applications.

Page 7: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Forum

Twitter News

Activity

Polls

EventsVideos

Here are the different features of the Ning site. I was also able to embed my Twitter feed on the page, along with RSS feeds of headlines from our school newspaper and alumni association, so the page always felt new and fresh. This dynamic content, I think, is a lot more compelling to students who are accustomed to real-time updates from Twitter and Facebook.

Page 8: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Screencasts  

Screencasts are recordings of your activity on the computer screen, typically with some narration from the user who describes his or her actions.

I chose to use Jing (http://www.jingproject.com/) for this task. It’s free, and is a small piece of software that you install on your computer. It’s available for Windows and Mac both. It’s very simple to use. There is a 5-minute limit for recordings.

Recordings can be automatically uploaded to Screencast.com, and you can then get a link that you can put on your social network, on Blackboard, on a blog, or just send in an e-mail. When someone clicks that link, they’ll be taken to your screencast, which is just like watching a video on YouTube.

In fact, Jing Pro, which costs $14.95/year, will upload to YouTube directly as an option. It also allows you to capture video from your webcam if you want to demonstrate something or be on camera yourself.

Page 9: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Links  to  four  Jing  screencasts

This is how I used social networking and screencasts for a class session when I had to be off-campus. Not wanting to miss the chance to cover some class content in this very fast-paced class, I assigned the students four screencasts to watch, and required them to discuss the material in the Ning discussion forum. One of our liveliest discussions resulted. Students responded very positively to this lesson and, as I’ll describe, many of them returned to the screencasts and the discussion later in the semester for review.

Page 10: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

A  sample  Jing  screencast...explaining  Jing

Here’s the link: http://www.screencast.com/t/MzliNjhmMT

You can hear my laptop fan start to run on this one - but at least my dog didn’t bark this time!

Page 11: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

The  Student  Experience:

Discussion          MotivationReview                        Novelty

Continuity

Here’s what students reported about this Ning + Jing experiment: they...★Discussed the content actively in forum★Could see each other’s activity and photos, which provided motivation★Reviewed screencasts multiple times and worked at their own pace★Enjoyed a new teaching technique★Were able to continue learning while the instructor was gone

Page 12: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Screencast  Applications  (1)Seattle Municipal Archives on Flickr

So, in a screencast, you can describe some type of class content while demonstrating it onscreen. You can show pictures, slides, or even a video on mute with your own voice-over. This is a great strategy for visual and auditory learners especially, who will benefit from re-watching and re-hearing your explanation.

Page 13: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Screencast  Applications  

(2)

...anything  you  might  have  to  explain  repeatedly!You can also use screencasts to provide students easily accessible explanations of software tools they’re using for class, and to explain class-related administrative tasks like how to use particular Blackboard features or how to submit a paper to Turnitin or ETS Criterion.

Essentially, take anything you can show onscreen or on a webcam, use five minutes to make a screencast about it, and you’ll save yourself the time of explaining it repeatedly. Students will also be pleased to have immediate access to the information 24/7 - as in at midnight when they’re trying to remember how to submit their paper on Blackboard before your deadline!

Page 14: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

ChallengesFlickr user mandyxclear

Here are some of the challenges of social networking and screencasts to keep in mind:★Prepare to manage your social network throughout the entire semester★Watch out for spammers★Encourage (and/or require!) active participation★Remind students of what is public and what is private on your network★Follow accessibility guidelines and be ready to adapt★Keep grades in a secure system, e.g., Blackboard; some education-oriented sites

integrating grade features, but proceed with caution★Rehearse difficult screencasts, and don’t be embarrassed to listen to yourself

Page 15: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Social  Networking  +  Screencasts  =  

Interaction  Around  Content        Engagement              Individual  Pace                      Flexibility  in  Instruction

So, in summary, here’s what you get by using this combination of technologies.

Page 16: Social Networking and Screencasts: A Powerful Combination

Epilogue

*

Ning is eliminating free accounts, and may offer some sort of discounted plan for educators, but it’s not yet known. The handout I’m providing (visit this blog post to get it) lists some possible free alternatives to use for class social networking.

I haven’t tested all of these, and some may work better than others for your particular class.

It never hurts to experiment, and students will likely enjoy getting to know the new technology as well. They are surprisingly open to trying these new techniques if you come across as confident about them and are obviously enjoying them yourself - so have fun with developing your own social network and screencasts.

Good luck with your explorations!