Presented at EDUCAUSE Annual Conferences, Instructional Technologies, and Podcasting

Using Video Streaming and Podcasting to Design Rich-Media Online Courses

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Using Video Streaming and Podcasting to Design Rich-Media Online Courses (ID: EDU07211)
Author(s):Diane Zorn (York University)
Origin:Presented at EDUCAUSE Annual Conferences (10/23/2007)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

This session will cover lessons learned and best practices for creating highly interactive, student-centered, rich-media online courses with customizable and mobile learning using Mediasite video streaming and video and audio podcasting. It will include a tour of a course Web site, 10 principles for good practice for innovative online education, and a course design toolkit.

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Blogs, Wikis, and Podcasts: Personal Authoring Technologies Enrich Communication and Expression for You and Your Students

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Title:Blogs, Wikis, and Podcasts: Personal Authoring Technologies Enrich Communication and Expression for You and Your Students (ID: EDU07167)
Author(s):Christopher Blaire Bundy (University of Wisconsin-Madison), Ronald J. Cramer (University of Wisconsin-Madison), and Doug Worsham (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Origin:Presented at EDUCAUSE Annual Conferences (10/23/2007)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

Personal authoring technologies have made it easier than ever for instructors and students to contribute their thoughts, experiences, and opinions to a global discourse. In addition, these technologies provide a rich opportunity for instructors to focus their students' attention on discipline-specific questions related to a single course or topic.

This seminar will give attendees valuable "face time" with blogs, wikis, and podcasts in order to critically assess their instructional value and creative potential, as well as the IT infrastructure required to support them. We will demonstrate the numerous technologies UW-Madison is using, discuss the pedagogical application and assessment of these technologies, present an overview of IT support challenges, and provide hands-on experiences with the production of blogs, wikis, and podcasts. The seminar will conclude with a discussion of other personal authoring technologies emerging on the educational horizon.

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Welcome to the Social: Effective Use of Podcasting for Freshman Classes

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Welcome to the Social: Effective Use of Podcasting for Freshman Classes (ID: EDU07140)
Author(s):Peter Juvinall (Illinois State University)
Origin:Presented at EDUCAUSE Annual Conferences (10/23/2007)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

Many of the motivations for podcasting a class take on a different light when dealing with a freshman course at 8:00 a.m. The presentation will highlight a portable and easy-to-use podcasting implementation and address some of the unique challenges of using podcasting for a freshman class.

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Podcasting the Classroom: Two Models

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Podcasting the Classroom: Two Models (ID: EDU06248)
Author(s):Elmer R. Masters and John Mayer
Origin:Presented at EDUCAUSE Annual Conferences (10/11/2006)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:CALI sponsored a project in which 50 faculty from 45 different law schools used podcasting in their courses. This presentation will demonstrate the open-source system we built to handle it (called Classcaster), discuss the lessons we learned, and talk about how any educational institution can add a scalable podcasting system to its repertoire.
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The Duke iPod First-Year Experience

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Title:The Duke iPod First-Year Experience (ID: EDU05149)
Author(s):Ginny B. Cake (Duke University) and Lynne M. O'Brien (Duke University)
Origin:Presented at EDUCAUSE Annual Conferences (10/19/2005)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:In 2004 Duke distributed iPods to more than 1,600 incoming freshmen. Discover how iPods were used in courses and student life, share lessons learned about coordination and collaboration from the technical and academic perspectives, and hear the assessment of academic use of iPods. Learn how the Duke iPod experiment evolved into a broader Duke Digital Initiative for the 2005-06 academic year.
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