Podcasts and Wikis: What Are They and How Can You Use Them in Your Teaching?
CTL Fellows Meeting December 5, 2006 Kathryn Shaughnessy Instructional Services Librarian
Podcasting in the Classroom
A podcast is…
A growing method of delivering audio information – Time-shifted – Place-shifted • An informational “broadcast” saved as an audio file (mp3) and distributed via the web (strictly speaking via RSS)
• Listeners download/listen at their convenience via desktop/laptop or on a personal player
Podcasting in the Classroom Podcasting timeline…
• August 2004: “iPodders” search for a way to retrieve old blogs and audiofiles – develop RSS (Winer) and podcast software (Curry) • July 2005: iTunes supports/distributes podcasts, get 1 million subscribers in first 2 days
• August 2005: 8,000 podcasts, 6 million listeners
• December 2005: Podcast selected as “Word of the Year” by editors of New Oxford American Dictionary: "a digital recording of a
radio broadcast or similar program, made available on the Internet for downloading to a personal audio player"
Hobson and Holtz Report, 8/4/2005 http://forimmediaterelease.biz/index.php/weblog/2005/08/05/ ) Oxford University Press, US website, http://www.oup.com/us/brochure/NOAD_podcast/?view=usa
Podcasting in the Classroom
Podcasting evolution …
• Personal / information sharing • Business applications • Religious groups • Education & Distributed Learning
Podcasting in the Classroom
DUKE: benefits of podcasts in learning/instruction • playback of difficult content/material
•
• • • •
multiple repetitions for listeners who have difficulty with English
allows for review/enjoyment of materials while multitasking (e.g.: commuting or exercising). inspired creation of podcasts among listeners increased “frequency and depth” of learner interaction, especially in language & music increased communication between faculty, library and IT; led to improved collaboration and planning, both within & among institutions.
Duke Report, 2004 - 2005
Podcasting in the Classroom
Current Uses of Podcast /Webcast Resources in Academia – Reference-quality lectures (NPR, LOC, Stanford & Princeton) – Student Instruction / Orientation (Drexel) – Community News (U. of Western Ontario) – Outreach to potential students (Peterson’s) – Scholarly Communication (U. of Florida) – Audio tours (Purdue)
Podcasting in the Classroom
Finding Podcasts: Google search “podcast directory”: • iTunes http://www.apple.com/itunes/podcasts/ • iPodder.org
http://www.ipodder.org/directory/4/podcasts/categories
• Yahoo http://podcasts.yahoo.com/ – Blogs and your favorite websites (helps to keep up with Newsgator RSS feedreader, they merged with FeedDemon publisher so feed has capability to download the podcast in a compatible FeedStation player or right-click and “save-as”) – Coming Soon: iTunesU (Wiki collaboration)
Podcasting in the Classroom
Creating Podcasts:
John’s Libraries:
http://www.stjohns.edu/academics/libraries/resources/podcasts
– Poetry Readings/ Author visits – Guest Lectures – Student essay winners, e.g.: Service Learning Essay – Instruction • Audio Tours • Resource Tutorials • Distributed Learning • Professional Development
Podcasting in the Classroom
Practical Questions for creating podcasts: – Investment of Money: • Computer (Laptop or Desktop) • Audio editing software (Audacity = free) • good microphone ($50) • headphone equipment ($40 - $60) Can record using a Laptop with Mic or purchase a digital Voice recorder ($40 – 80) to use with or without a lapel mic ($25)
(see equipment handout for more information)
Podcasting in the Classroom
Practical Questions for creating podcasts: – Investment of time: • learning editing software -- not long to learn basics of Audacity • editing -- this takes the most time, if lengthy session • annotations – depending on how/whether you want to make it easy for your users to preview or skip to point within a podcast • Adding metadata – not long, but important • Uploading – not long
Podcasting in the Classroom
Technical Questions: – How many files/downloads can the server handle? • 8 minute podcast, saved bit rate 64 size: 7 MB time to download on T1: 10 seconds • 70 minute lecture, saved bit rate 64 size: 28 MB time to download on T1: 22 second – How do we index / store / retrieve? – How do we handle preservation/archiving of files
Podcasting in the Classroom
Legal Questions: – Release form for electronic recording • Library developed one, should have it approved by counsel – Clarify extent of distribution to lecturer • On main website: available to all • CMS or intranet: Although password protected, once in digital format, it is relatively easy to duplicate.
Wikis in the Classroom
What is a wiki? – Website that can be updated quickly, by many people • Good for collaborating on a big project or paper • Good for a site that covers dynamic content Editing capabilities can be open or password protected at site or page level
Wikis in the Classroom
How to use/incorporate a wiki? – External examples: • Wikipedia http://www.wikipedia.org/ • Encyclopedia of Earth http://www.eoearth.org/ – Internal examples: • DiscoverNY http://discoverny.pbwiki.com/Brazil • Podcasts http://podcastresources.pbwiki.com/
Podcasts and wikis in the Classroom
• Strengths of using external/internal podcasts & wikis: – facilitates development of information literacy and life-long learning – enriches primary-resource research & reference base – coach vs. sage – facilitating/motivating individual learner inquiry and peer discussion – engages different styles of learning – assists low-vision and ESL students
Podcasts and wikis in the Classroom
Podcasting and wikis and future trends in academia – Scholarly publishing – Public/Open Access – Archives – E-Portfolios – ?????
Podcasts and wikis in the Classroom
Please contact me with any questions/suggestions – Kathryn Shaughnessy, x1454 Shaughnk@stjohns.edu St. John’s University Library