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Educational Podcasting teacher and expert voices as media interventions. Andrew Middleton, Sheffield Hallam University Podcasting for Pedagogic Purposes SIG Glasgow Caledonian University, 7 th May 2009. These slides will be shared on: PPP wiki and slideshare.net. Audio examples.
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Educational Podcastingteacher and expert voices as media interventions Andrew Middleton, Sheffield Hallam University Podcasting for Pedagogic Purposes SIG Glasgow Caledonian University, 7th May 2009 These slides will be shared on: PPP wiki and slideshare.net
Audio examples • Apologies - I have removed the audio examples from this presentation as I don't have permission to share them in this way. • Please contact me directly if you would like to hear examples and I'll see what I can do. • a.j.middleton AT shu.ac.uk
teachers and experts? • This presentation accompanies a presentation on learner-generated podcasts • Caveats: • Beyond iTunes U..? – what can educational podcasting be? • Educational podcasting: taking a broad view • and a Social Constructivist view: • Expertise is everywhere • Teachers are everywhere • We are all learners, learners all have expertise, however… • The focus here is a small selection of podcasting techniques that do not (primarily) feature the student learner’s voice • Media intervention – orientation, motivation and challenge
A definition • Educational podcasting is the development of, • Locally shared knowledge through distributed, digital linear media, accessible to its community through flexible interfaces (Podcasting in general might be defined as,the serial distribution, through a particular web-based channel, of locally created downloadable digital media episodes, usually audio, to a niche audience of subscribers)
Design Principles of Educational Podcasting • We need to be able to evaluate the ideas we hear in the next few minutes, so: • 1 minute activity: • What makes a good podcast? • (see next two slides for my ideas on this - and I'll type up the responses I received and put them on my blog at: • http://podcasting-for-lta.blogspot.com/)
Effective educational podcasts will usually present (1/2) • Intention and clarity of purpose • Speakers whose role and level of expertise is properly introduced • Ideas and discussion that is relevant and well articulated • An awareness of the learning situation or context • Invitations and challenges, or 'ways in and ways out', for the listener • References to, or acknowledgement of, related sources of knowledge • …
Effective educational podcasts will usually present (2/2) • A hook that engages each listener • Conversational voices rather than formal monologues • Structured and well-signposted information, punctuated with music or audio transitions where appropriate • An awareness of the strengths and weaknesses of the audio medium • Information and ideas that are concise, well-paced and straightforward • Suitable clear production quality as appropriate for the intended audience.
Tutor’s voice • Recording events (eg recorded lecture, summary audio notes) • Communicating (eg module announcements) • Motivating (eg tutor conversations, storytelling, etc) • Describing (eg interviews with professionals, clients, public) • Illustrating (eg testimony, vox pop) • Forming (eg instructional; feedback) • Building (eg key skill development) • Modelling (eg behaviour, techniques)
Other voices: experts and publics • Support services, Broadcasting and Commercial producers, Educational and Training Organisations, Professional & Other Organisations, teachers elsewhere, and tutors out of class • Instructing (eg learning objects) • Describing (eg interviews with experts) • Updating (eg current affairs and developments) • Marketing (eg product placement, initiatives) • Reporting (eg findings, proposals) • Conversing (eg criticism, review) • Advocating (eg political) • Various (eg learning objects)
Coursecasting • Or, pouring knowledge into the empty vessel • e.g. recording lectures • (example not needed! Go to ITunes U) • How does coursecasting measure against our design principles? • Supplementary and (often) not transformative pedagogy • Some benefits claimed: support revision; reduce note-taking, so better attention in class; potential reusability; marketing (e.g. iTunes U!); can free up time for more interactivity.
Preview • Key concepts introduced before class/lecture • Challenge and/or orientation before class/lecture Module preview Lecture preview
Summary Conversations(Review) Tutor (team) post lecture/seminar/topic discussion, challenge, reflection discussion • Highlighting • Arguing or sharing perspectives • Modelling synthesis and reflection • Supplementing • Updating • Connecting/bridging and feeding forward Lecturer discussion (UoS) Research methods discussion (Law, SHU)
Module Personalisation (announcements) • Tutor posts announcements to the VLE • Why? • the personal touch • Mobile leaners • Remote leaners • Short, easy interventions that add texture to the VLE Task announcement (June Clark, SHU)
Storytelling(evidence and anecdote) • Establishing the tutor’s perspective through anecdote and evidence, raising authenticity by connecting theory to the outside world. • Storytelling may involve other captured voices Biggs suggests, "[The strengths of the lecture] lie in communicating a) information and (b) the teacher's personal interpretations.” Biggs, J. 1999 'Enriching large-class teaching' in John Biggs (1999) Teaching for quality learning at university. Buckingham: Society for Research into Higher Education and Open University Press, p.97 A Permanent Holiday' Patent Voices http://www.patientvoices.org.uk/ (cc) nc-nd
The Professional View • Interviews with professionals • No physical barriers allow us to make strong, meaningful connections to the outside world – the extended learning environment Radio producer (Journalism, SHU) Demos
Audio Feedback • Many approaches, e.g. (Middleton, A. & Nortcliffe, A. (2009) Audio feedback design: principles and emerging practice. International Journal of Continuing Engineering Education and Life-long Learning, Special Issue, forthcoming) • 'Personal tutor monologue' recorded at the PC by the tutor as part of the marking process; 'Personal feedback conversations,' recorded by the tutor or student(s) in the lab or studio to capture project discussions or studio 'crits'; 'Broadcast feedback' targeted at large groups; 'Peer audio feedback,' in which students learn as they assess each other's work; 'Tutor conversations', a 'common room conversation' approach designed to model critical thinking; and 'Personal audio interventions,' targeted at individuals to address emerging issues; ‘Peer Exchange’ corridor constructive crits with tutor support. • Generic stub + Personal(France, D. & Ribchester, C. (2008) 'Podcasts and feedback' in G. Salmon and P. Edirisingha (2008) Podcasting for learning in universities. Milton Keynes, UK: Open University Press) Generic, end of module (SHU) Peer Exchange model, corridor conversations (SHU) Personal tutor feedback (SHU)
Concept notes • Key concepts captured or constructed as reusable digital audio learning objects (DALO) • Can be captured in lecture • Prepared beforehand Key skills in Art & Design (SHU) Audio learning object (Alan Hilliard, UoH)
Audio iIllustration • Audio tour • Bringing the outside world in • Fly on the wall • Case-based learning • Data 4 Weddings and a funeral Downes Syndrome (D. Stokes, Coventry University) Audio tour (Stuart Lee, Oxford University)
Demonstration • Procedures, e.g.: • Clinical (e.g. videocast learning object) • Operational • Techniques (e.g. screencasting) Blackboard support series (SHU) Clinical practice series (Pollard & Jackson SHU)
Guidance • Often made by support services staff, e.g. supporting: • transition, • disability, • key skills, • library, • etc Access and guidance/transition (SHU)
Summary of Benefits • Access to voices (e.g. personalisation, empathy, trust) • Efficacy (simple, quick, high impact) • Authentic (real worldness, open-ended ) • Currency (e.g. immediate, up-to-date) • Social Constructivist (promoting conversation) • Engaging, varied, perspectives • Varied diet – another learning channel • Orienting, motivating, challenging media interventions