Tuesday, 1 November 2011

Screencasting for the Classroom: Teacher and Student Uses

I saw old Autumn in the misty morn
Stand shadowless like Silence
--Thomas Hood

It's that time of year again. The excitement of Halloween has passed and the cold, dark and wet wait for the Christmas season has begun. A nasty cold has been descending on me all day. I write accompanied by a box of Kleenex and a hot lemon tea. Nonetheless, I persevere on my Web 2.0 quest in the face of such adversity!

Although my experiment to use Jing to assess student work is not yet complete, I have been gathering ideas about how screencasting can be used in a classroom setting.

For Teachers:
  • to create "how to" instructions for using technology
  • to create a narrated guide to useful websites
  • to assess student work with commentary rather than pen marks
  • to narrate visual tours (with Powerpoint, Prezi, etc.) (Richardson, 2010, p. 123)
  • to provide think alouds about the writing process or other learning process up on the screen
For Students (very similar to how teachers would use it):
  • to create mini-lessons for classmates on everything from math problems, to grammar, to using Web tools
  • to create their own guided internet tours (Richardson, 2010, p. 123)
  • to narrate stories or poetry with accompanying visuals (Richardson, 2010, p. 123)
  • to provide self assessment of their own work / writing. With their assignment up on the screen, they could discuss what they perceive as their strengths and the areas that need more work, and they could also reflect on the thinking process that went in terms of doing the assignment (meta-cognition).
What is particularly useful about Jing is you (or your students) can provide a link to the appropriate screencast in an email, or it can be embedded it in a class blog, wiki or moodle.

Whereas I am a high school English/Socials teacher, my colleague in learning, Joclyn Beliveau, is a primary teacher and she has her own post here on how screencasting can be used in the classroom. She connects the higher-order thinking required to create a screencast to Bloom's Taxonomy - excellent! Definitely worth the read.

References

Beliveau, J. (2011, October 31). Screencasting - taking thinking to a higher order [web log post]. Retrieved from http://techtasticteaching.blogspot.com/2011/10/screencasting-taking-thinking-to-higher.html

Richardson, W. (2010).
Blogs, wikis, podcasts, and other powerful web tools for classrooms. Thousands Oaks, CA: Corwin.

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for the shout out, Jen! Can't wait to read about your experiencecs screencastng. I found it to be a lot of fun and very forgiving, because you just delete your oopsie screen casts and start over until you are happy (but try not to be too much of a perfectionist!)

    I think your high school students could really run with this tool, moreso than my primary little ones. Best of luck screen casting,

    Joclyn

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