the power of podcasting student expressed learning

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The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

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Page 1: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

The Power of Podcasting

Student Expressed Learning

Page 2: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

Check out what these kids did…

http://allanah.podOmatic.com/entry/2010-03-18T19_03_24-07_00

This is a poem written by Margaret Schroder from Nelson, New Zealand. Four clever and articulate children learned all

about podcasting and created a number of them. Here is their rendition of Margaret’s poem.

Page 3: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

Participatory Culture

Unlike a few short years ago, our students are involved in a culture in which communicating globally is the norm. They share their ideas, concerns, beliefs and creations with an audience of both friends and strangers.

Page 4: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

The Pew Internet & American Life project found that over half of teens using the internet are ‘content creators’. Bloggers (69% of teens) share their own creations: photos or videos, drawings and stories. They create webpages for themselves and friends. Their handiwork incorporates remixed online materials such as songs and videos that they have downloaded online.

(Lenhardt & Madden, Oct, 2004)

Page 5: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

The internet is a two-way street…

Few barriers to

artistic expression

Strong support for sharing creations

Page 6: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

Participatory culture offers:

• An informal mentoring relationship where knowledge and experience is passed on.

• Participants believe that their contribution matters.

• A social connection is created.

Page 7: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

The Benefits include…

• Realization of the value of intellectual property• Peer-to-Peer learning• Supports cultural diversity• Skills acquisition for the workplace• Promotes community involvement• Development of social skills through collaboration• Expands research and technology skills that

begin in the classroom

Page 8: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

What is a podcast?

iPod + Broadcast = Podcast

“Podcasting is the method of distributing multimedia files over the Internet using RSS syndication formats for playback on mobile devices and

personal computers.”

J. Dorman, Do You Have the Audacity to Podcast?

Page 9: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

FYI

Technically, a podcast is only audio, but the term now also encompasses the use of video also (technically, a vodcast).

For today’s session, we will focus on the audio podcast format to help you become familiar with how to design and incorporate it into your curriculum.

Page 10: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

Let’s let Dr. Tyson, former principal of Mabry Middle School in Marietta, Georgia, give us a first-hand description of just how a podcast can be used in an educational setting. They have been very successful in producing a number of wonderful podcasts.

http://itunes.apple.com/podcast/podcast-central/id73888013

Page 11: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

Why Use It?

• Creative outlet for sharing information

• Engaging tool for your students• Students use 21st century skills• Supports differentiated learning• Involves critical thinking skills• Students control the product

Page 12: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

How to Use It…

Class events

Student news

Narratives

Oral History

Instructions

Character creation

Improve reading & speech

Studycast

Unit overview

Page 13: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

More examples…

A biology lesson via podcast:

http://biologyoracle.podomatic.com/player/web/2010-02-18T20_10_21-08_00

An interview with Mr. Darcy: http://podcourse.blogspot.com/2009/08/character-interview.html

Page 14: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

Getting Started…1. Choose Your Equipment

You only need a microphone, some software and the ability to talk!

• Features of a good microphone• Editing software – Audacity

(http://audacity.sourceforge.net)• Music – Copyright free at

www.freeplaymusic.com

Page 15: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

2. Plan Your Recording

• Consider your audience

• Name your podcast

• What is your purpose?

• What format will be used?

• How long will it be?

• Write a storyboard

Page 16: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

3. Record the Podcast

Let students practice reading their scripts aloud and often. It should be close to being memorized. Test the sound levels, try their voices and make adjustments. Remind your students to speak slowly and clearly, be quiet if you aren’t speaking, don’t move the mic or get too close to it and be interested in what you are saying because your voice will show it if you don’t.

Page 17: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

4. Edit Your Recording

Now is the time to cut out mistakes or those long periods of silence. Some rerecording may be necessary. Check the length…most podcasts are no more than 10 minutes long or people may become bored.

Add music to the podcast. It can also be a great divider or transition between different speakers.

Page 18: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

5. Upload Your Podcast

Convert the file to MP3 format (the standard for podcasting).

Upload the podcast with a descriptive words or tags. It can be put on a free site, your school website or on a blog.

Test your podcast on an MP3 player to make sure it is ready to be seen by the world!

Page 19: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

6. It’s Time to Publish!

RSS files describe your podcasts and help provide a link so others can find it.

You can promote your podcast on educational Podcast Directory so a large number of people can see it.

Page 20: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

One way to find podcasts…

• Open iTunes

• Click “iTunes Store” on Left

• Click “Podcasts” Inside Window

• Click “Power Search” on Right

• Type in Keyword under Description

• Locate podcast by your interest

Page 21: The Power of Podcasting Student Expressed Learning

ResourcesPodcasting Communities• http://www.podcastalley.com/• http://edublogs.org/Podcast Receiver/Players • http://www.apple.com/itunes• http://juicereceiver.sourceforge.net/Audio Recording/Editing (Audacity) • http://audacity.sourceforge.net/Music You Can Use http://music.podshow.com/• http://freeplaymusic.com/Hosting Site• http://www.switchpod.com/• http://www.libsyn.com• http://www.podcasting-tools.com/submit-podcasts.htmSubmitting Podcasts to iTunes• https://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZFinance.woa/wa/

publishPodcast