Archive for the '3. >>PODCASTING>>' Category

Jul 15 2009

Podcasts, Videos and TeacherTube

TeacherTube for Video

Jane and I played around with TeacherTube a couple of years back.  Think of it as YouTube for educators.  We uploaded a couple of videos there, nothing fancy (We used the tempermental, not-so-school-friendly Windows Movie Maker, but that’ll be another post).  I put up a video of a student teacher demonstrating the famous Pepsi/Mentos reaction, a video of some guys traveling the world in a biodeisel firetruck and another video of Leo Brooks working with students on hand drumming.  To my astonishment, my video showing what happens when you mix Mentos and Pepsi has since been viewed over 5000 times. So, I kept digging and checked out Jane’s stats.  Not that we’re competitive or anything…

Jane, always the master educator, made a  couple of videos of students teaching the science of elastic and potential energy (The Comeback Can and the Wind Up Tractor).  Typically, she left me in the dust.  As of this posting, her video, “The Comeback Can” has been viewed over 8981 times.  Not quite viral, but pretty good for a grade 5 science lesson out in the portables.

One of the cons of TeacherTube is the advertising.  I’ve only encountered education related ads, but I still prefer to steer students away from them.  However, embedding these videos in your own blog helps reduce wandering minds.

TeacherTube gives you the necessary code to embed videos into your blog.  Here’s my exploding Pepsi video:

And Jane’s comeback can:

TeacherTube for Audio

It turns out that TeacherTube now hosts MP3 files as well.  For me, this is a big deal.  Jane and I have been on the search for an easy-to-use, free, unlimited storage space solution for our podcasts.  We now have three seasons worth of Portable Radio and one season of Portable PD and are reluctant to take any of it down.  TeacherTube appears to fit all of our needs – even the one about unlimited storage space.  So, fingers crossed, I’ll experiment with uploading our next podcast there.

TeacherTube even gives you the code to embed the audio in your blog.  A nice feature since Edublogs (the provider of this blog) no longer generates a player for audio. Here’s our latest podcast:

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Jul 14 2009

=IF(J3>0.9,”A”,IF(J3>=0.8,”B”,IF (J3>0.7,”C”, IF(J3>0.7,”C”,IF (J3>0.5,”D”,”F”)))))

Published by Jane Smith under 3. ...Assessment, Musings, News

I decided in June that since my children were keeping me close to home this year, I would take whatever tech workshops the OCDSB was offering this summer. It was a great decision, I enjoy my weekly trips to Confederation Learning Centre computer lab. Today’s workshop was about Excel. It was called “Advanced Excel” and I don’t mind saying that I was a little nervous about the “advanced” part of the billing. Fortunately, it was all good. I actually figured some stuff out on my own! We imported text, learned about Pivot tables (really cool) and how to tweak some formulas (the IF ones are my favourite). It was a morning well spent.

It was a predominantly secondary teacher crowd. I think there was only one other elementary teacher there. I don’t normally get to hang out with secondary teachers. Our tasks in the workshop were to import student records and have Excel organize the data, sort it and play around with the numbers. The records that we imported included marks like 23/25 for different assignments. We worked on having Excel calculate averages, percent, highest score and lowest score. The secondary teacher beside me was really enjoying all that she could do with the program to organize her marks and classes. I was finding it neat too but I don’t know that I will be using Excel the same way she does.

Over the past few years, I have experienced a lot of change around assessment and reporting. With the reporting that we do, and the comments that we write, anecdotal records now hold more information for me than marks. My mark book that used to have things like 23/25 or 72% has been replaced with copies of rubrics with levels 1,2,3,4 and scrawled comments. I wrestle with how to marry my achievement chart based comments with a final A, B, C or D. I try use Excel to keep this data in some order. While the workshop today was looking at coming up with an overall average to create a final percentage mark, I think that I will be looking at finding the “most recent, highest scores”. I am looking at how to organize my data to sort different level readers into guided reading groups. I am thinking of doing “IF” formulas that colour code my level 4s as red, 3s as blue, 2s as green and 1s yellow in order to differentiate my program. I wonder if I can do that.  =IF(J3i=4=red) … this is going to take some thinking. I didn’t ask at today’s workshop, didn’t want to sound too elementary, pretty colours and all.

I really enjoyed today’s workshop and learned a lot about Excel that I will put to use in ways that make sense to me. But, I wish that I had spent some time speaking with the secondary teachers to find out the mysteries of their jobs and assessment methods. I have always known that elementary and secondary schools are not the same. I began to wonder about how different we are. It made me think about how we don’t really have a dialogue between elementary and secondary teachers. I hope that someone out there sees the “big picture”. I really hope that we are doing things at the elementary level that support our students as they go on. Perhaps we at elementary could learn a few things from our secondary colleagues and vice versa … Oh, oh sounds a bit like crazy talk, too much time spent with IF,OR,NOT,TRUE,FALSE, and AND.

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Apr 27 2009

The Ultimate Podcast Organizer

Published by Jane Smith under 3. ...Equipment

 

Sonia Manchen and Tracy Nicholson from Jack Donahue P.S. have created the “Ultimate Podcast Organizer”. They took the items that they received as part of our podcast kit and found a container, I think at Canadian Tire, to house everything. With the labels on the items and in the box it makes it really easy for kids to take the kit and be responsible for returning everything to the proper place. The storage box is 38 cm x38 cm. The brand of the box is Plano model 3870 from the Plano molding company . A neat and inexpensive way to keep your podcast stuff organized.

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Mar 29 2009

Students create Earth Hour announcement

Here’s our latest Green Team Here’s our latest Green Team announcement promoting Earth Hour at WEJ! It’s been airing all week over the morning announcements and is posted on our school blog site (www.wej1.blogspot.com)

Listen

Shaw

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Mar 26 2009

Resource supporting Our Class Podcast

Sonia Manchen, one of our diligent TLLP workshop participants, has shared this worksheet to use with that best seller “Our Class Podcast”.

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Mar 23 2009

Domain Forwarding

Huh?

Just like pressing the buttons on your car radio for your favourite radio stations, you can set the internet to go to your website/blog/wiki/podcast by typing an easy to remember name like portablepd.ca.

Before Domain Forwarding

A few years ago Jane and I maintained class websites.  The URL would look something like this:

http://alornecassidyes.ocdsb.ca/toft/index/index.htm

This was a bit much to ask students and parents to memorize it.  We would send students to our school site first and have them navigate to the links to our sites that were listed there at the time.

Thanks Brent Coley!

I had never seriously thought about getting my own domain name.  I assumed it would be way too expensive and complicated.  Thanks to Brent Coley, a Grade 5 teacher in California, I came across the term domain forwarding.  Here’s how he explained how he got mrcoley.com.

Domain Forwarding is simply a pointer to your website, blog, wiki or whatever.  For example, the “real” URL for this blog is www.portablepd.edublogs.org.  With domain forwarding it can also be found at www.portablepd.ca.

How to get a domain name

1.  Find a registrar. I recommend you go with one that is certified by the Canadian Internet Registry Authority (CIRA.CA). Here’s their list of certified registrars.

This is where we found 10dollar.ca. They charge about $13 a year for each of the various domain names  we use (5nt.ca, 56js.ca, alornecassidy.ca, portableradio.ca, portablepd.ca).

2.  Type in the “real” URL in the admin portion of the site.  10dollar.ca has a “Easy Domain Forwarding” link where you can do this.

image

3.  Wait a day or two for everything to work properly.

4.  Spread the word about your new domain name.

What if you don’t need the domain name anymore?

Because class assignments change from year to year it makes sense to start up the domain name sometime during summer holidays.  For example, Jane had 5js.ca for a year.  Then, when her assignment changed, she chose not to renew 5js.ca but bought her new 56js.ca name.

Of course you might decide to buy reallycoolteachers.ca (it’s available, I checked.  Act fast though, Jane and I might decide to buy it) and not worry about changing the domain year every year.

Is it worth it?

As far as Jane and I are concerned; absolutely.  The kids get in the habit of going to our class sites (5nt.ca and 56js.ca) for everything.  Very easy.  Very convenient.

OK, but is it necessary?

No. And it costs a bit of money. Honestly, it isn’t that hard to memorize a URL like grade5nt.edublogs.org. And, you could email students and parents the URL and ask them to bookmark it.

Nevertheless, don’t underestimate the coolness factor. Having the 5nt.ca domain name makes our class look like a multimillion dollar company.  Well not quite, but it’s still cool.  At least I think it is…

I’ve heard of some teachers who have their students type in a keyword in a Google search and get to their destination almost as quickly.  I, being the somewhat controlling type, would rather students not be distracted by other sites that come up in a Google search – especially when the words are misspelt.

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Mar 22 2009

Questions: Uploading audio and Categories vs. Blogrolls

Hello Nathan!

I’m a Grade 7/8 Teacher from Thamesville, Ontario. I’ve recently started a class blog (http://www.jpepper.edublogs.org) (January 2009) and have stumbled across yours. You have an excellent blog and have some very creative students. After March Break, my class will be starting to work on podcasting. I’ve noticed your class has some podcasts as well.

I have a couple of questions, if you don’t mind answering:

1) Is portableradio.ca a place where I could eventually upload my students’ podcasts or is it your site?

2) I noticed on your blog [5nt.ca] that beside each student’s name in brackets is the number of posts they have. How do I get this application to work on my blog?

Thanks for your time.

Jason

************
Jason Pepper
Good Shepherd Catholic School
Thamesville, ON


Hi Jason,

I’ll do my best to answer your questions:

1) Is portableradio.ca a place where I could eventually upload my students’ podcasts or is it your site?

Portableradio.ca is the blog that my class (5nt.ca) and Jane Smith’s class of grade 5/6 students (56js.ca) share as our podcast site. The site is designed to showcase the podcasts made by the two classes.

The portableradio.ca site runs off of Edublogs.org.  I see that you are using Edublogs for your blog as well.  You can upload your sound to your blog but the free version limits you to 20MB which very roughly translates into about 25 minutes of mp3 audio.  I put together a video tutorial on how you do that.

If you get hooked on this stuff, you will want to find more storage space.  One options is to become an Edublogs supporter and receive 5GB of storage ($). Or, your school might have its own website for uploading audio.  Once you’ve done uploaded the audio, figure out its URL and link to it from your Edublogs blog.

2) I noticed on your blog [5nt.ca] that beside each student’s name in brackets is the number of posts they have. How do I get this application to work on my blog?

Here’s what Jason is referring to:

I see that your students each have their own blog and you have them listed under “Blogroll’ which, in effect, is a list of links to separate websites.  I don’t know of a way to make the number of posts they write on their individual blogs show up on yours.

In my case, I’ve elected for my students not to have their own blogs. My students contribute to the one blog. That way, I can moderate all posts and comments. I’ve set each student as “Contributor” and list their names as categories. Whenever they write a post, they check off their name a pull-down menu of categories.  Click here for more information about how we set this up. I have a suspicion that some of the things we talk about in this document may now require you becoming an Edublogs supporter ($)

Here’s how I made the number of posts written by each student appear. In your Edublogs dashboard go to “Design” and select “Widgets”.  If you haven’t already, drag over the “Categories” widget into your sidebar.  Click on “edit” and check “Show Post Counts”. Remember this only works with the “Category” widget and not “Blogroll”.

I hope that was useful.  Let us know when your podcast is “live” on the internet.  We’d love to add a link to it here on our PortablePD.ca site.

3 responses so far

Mar 17 2009

How to listen to PortablePD.ca on iTunes

While it is easy to listen to our podcasts on this website, Jane and I recommend you try finding the PortablePD Podcast on iTunes as well.  That way, whenever  a new show becomes available, it will automatically be downloaded to your computer. Now that the podcast is on iTunes, it can easily be added to your iPod.  Imagine, listening to Jane and Nathan when you do aerobics, jog, drive, or take the dog out for a walk.

or click here

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Mar 02 2009

“How To” Science Podcasts

Hi Nathan and Jane!

 We finally have our “How to” science podcasts posted on our classroom blogsite (http://www.wej33.blogspot.com/)! This project was a procedural writing/reflection piece created from knowledge we gained during our trip to the Museum of Science and Technology. We attended workshops on stability and forces. The bed tracks used for the podcasts were developed as a class on a SMART board using Acid Express (thanks for that latest TLLP workshop session!). A great shared lesson integrating technology and music!

 Thanks again for the PLC, my students are truly benefiting from the PD provided by you!

 Cheers, back to reports!

Jamie Barteaux

Grade 3 – CCT – W.E. Johnston P.S.

2 responses so far

Feb 27 2009

Portable Radio Wins Award

Published by Nathan Toft under 3. >>PODCASTING>>, News

 

PortableRadio.ca is a student podcast Jane and I have been producing for the past three years.  We’re very pleased to be bragging to you about this…

Nathan and Jane,

Congratulations!  Your podcast was selected for a Kidcast Award in the Editorial POV category!  I apologize for how long this contest has drug on, but we’ve finally wrapped it all up.  The judges were very impressed and complimentary of you and your students work.  I, for one, enjoy holding up your podcast as an example for teachers and students everywhere.  Thank you for engaging your students in this medium and helping them develop their sense of inquiry, argument, point of view, and communication.  You are giving them gifts that will anchor them solidly in their future.

Your trophy is on its way and should arrive soon!

Thank you again for you participation!  I wish you continued success with your show!

Dan Schmit
KidCast: Podcasting in the Classroom
http://www.intelligenic.com/blog

3 responses so far

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