Showing posts with label multimedia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label multimedia. Show all posts
Saturday, October 17, 2015
Monday, September 28, 2015
Vlog #5 Multimedia Tools: Using Video Assessment Tools Platforms
Spanish 1 students will soon be required to create and present their first dialogue in Spanish. They will be required to memorize and present the project in front of the class. In order to scaffold knowledge, I have learned to use video assessment tools. One of them is Zaption. Zaption allows you to use any You Tube Video to insert interactive features to check for understanding and assess mastery of knowledge. Zaption offers a free trial version. It also offers a platform where students and teachers can find preloaded "tours". Tours are interactive videos that students use to learn about a topic and assess their understanding.
I was really impressed about the engagement a video assessment platform can offer. I was doing some research about video assessment tools. I explored different ones. I came across an interactive math lesson in math. It was about percentages. My 12 year old son was practicing his Saxophone in the same room. The video I was playing got his attention and he was all excited. He wanted to watch it. He started watching it and without asking me he started answering all the math questions about percentages. He was so engaged and excited ( I was thrilled! He was willingly reviewing math percentages!). Later he noticed that the video was 8 minutes long. He told me: "Mom, that was 8 minutes? It did not feel like it!"
I like the possibilities that I am finding in video assessment tools. I am using video assessment tools now to scaffold and assess knowledge. Here is a short video vlog that describes how I use video tools.
Monday, September 21, 2015
Vlog #4 Multimedia: Google Hang Outs and More
I can't believe there is so much to learn about multimedia. I thought I was very fluent in digital literacy and technology. Through my classes in the Masters in Educational Technology I am learning that there is more than one way to do something. This week I learned about broadcasting live on the internet. I used Google Hangs Out on Air and recorded a lesson and a vlog in a different format. I find Google Hangs Out on Air to be an extremely useful tool for recording tutorials, co-teaching, and helping students and professionals stay connected. Here is a snap shot of what I learned:
Sunday, September 13, 2015
Vlog #3 Multimedia Learning Assumptions: The Principles
Sunday, September 6, 2015
Vlog #2 Playing with Multimedia
Here is the second installment of my 6-8
week Vlog Series about multimedia. In this Vlog I quickly talk about playing
with multimedia and suggestions based on Wes Fryer's book Playing with Multimedia: Ideas for Powerful Sharing (Fryer, 2011) along with new discoveries in my own learning in the
Master’s in Educational Technology.
Wes Fryer
(2011) does a very good job providing lots of resources for teachers who want
to incorporate multimedia in the classroom. I recommend getting the e-book
version of this book in order to have access to all the hyperlinks and
additional resources that Fryer includes in his book. I want to highlight some
of the resources that Fryer mentions in his book that I found to be extremely
helpful.
Blogs
Fryer highly recommends using blogs and wikis for teachers. Teachers can create a classroom blog in which students submit written
work and rich media and the teacher acts as a moderator before publishing. He
also conveys the message that either blogs or wikis are an excellent way to get
to listen to each student’s voice and opinions about a topic. Most
frequently there is never enough time to listen to all students in a class. Blogs and wikis allow for collaboration and interaction. Check out Fryer's blog about Classroom Blogging Options.
I personally use Blogger and despite some complicated setting up issues, once you get past the setting up of the blog it is very easy to use. Another alternative is the VLOG. A vlog is a recorded version of a regular blog. This is the simplest to use in a few easy steps:
I personally use Blogger and despite some complicated setting up issues, once you get past the setting up of the blog it is very easy to use. Another alternative is the VLOG. A vlog is a recorded version of a regular blog. This is the simplest to use in a few easy steps:
a) Sign unto Google with your account
b) Go to You Tube on the applications
c) Click on the upload buton
d) On the right hand corner select record
e) Give permission to your camera
f) Start recording
g) Add a title and check on the settings in case you want to add a description or other features
Digital Library
Fryer suggests
to join Scribd, a digital library for all sorts of
digital books and comics. Scribd has a 14 day trial.
Video Making
I had the
opportunity to use Crazy Talk 7 and Bitmoji app on Android to
create a one of a kind character that talks. Crazy Talk 7 is one of the
best products to create fictional character that you can make talk by recording
and modifying your voice or by uploading previously recorded audio files and
attaching them to your character. Crazy Talk offers a 15 day trial. Bitmoji is
a free app that students can use to create their personal avatar or bitmoji to
send to others or use as images for other projects.
I recommend this project for delivering information, allowing students to become a fictional character
to demonstrate mastery of content, or just as a fun way to engage students in
the classroom. I created a character named Sofia that will help me introduce
concepts in my Spanish 1 classes. Here is a simple project I created using the
free trial version of Crazy Talk 7 and Bitmoji.
Sunday, August 30, 2015
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