Presentation11

Post on 27-May-2015

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TAA elearning presentation by yum productions for Session 11

Transcript of Presentation11

The force was strong today

The force was strong today

I want this week be over

I want this week be over

Ready for dinnerReady for dinner

On a roll today

On a roll today

I’ve seen better days

I’ve seen better days

Use the text tool to record your current mood state

Use the text tool to record your current mood state

Video

Preparing for your trial• Send out your welcome email and any

instructions for work to be completed prior to your Elluminate session(we will send out email details of you all tonight – remember to cc us in!

• Email us names of anyone you want to add to the trial of your Moodle material

• Make a time with us if you have not so far (see Doodle link)

Strangers are

coming!

Strangers are

coming!

After your trial

• Send us your completed peer review sheet for the Elluminate session

• Send us the results of your survey (PDF)

• Complete a short report on your trail

Final Report

• Progress with learners• Unexpected issues, difficulties in the online

environment• Alterations, adaptations or enhancements

Re-evaluation and adaption of delivery plan• Any additional support or help you require

to enhance the delivery to your learners• Insights and examples of learner feedback• Implications of your experience with this

delivery trial for e learning at your organisation

• Any other issues of relevance

Video Agenda

• Video in Training• Video Options• Video Production • Video Editing

About Video• Video files by trainers can provide a wide range of

applications in the training environment and augment existing content delivery strategies.

• Video files can be downloaded and played by learners from their computer, television sets, on portable mp3 players and mobile phones.

• videos are highly transferable i.e. you can embed them on web sites/LMS/blogs/wikis for your students to view or embed them in PowerPoint

Video in Training

• Good for demonstrations and illustrating concepts, ideas and examples.

• They can be supported by text, captions, diagrams, still images, descriptions, interviews and interactions.

Video in Training

You can use Video to support learners to think out and present workplace processes and work flows using video. When you create your our own videos as a group with learners as opposed to viewing 'others films', it enhances interactions and personalizes within the groups.

Video in Training• Videos are good for illustration purposes. • They are supported by text and interactions. • 20 second video can replace a full page of

text when trying to explain a detailed process

• Use to highlight, freeze-frame or slow-motion an event/process

• Using video to depict real scenario can make whole situation so much more engaging

http://designing.flexiblelearning.net.au/gallery/activities/videosharing.htm

Video in Training• Promote identification with job roles,

contexts and workplace processes• Can be story driven (narrative)• Support a range of learner

preferences (visual, reflective learners)

Video in Training• Scaffolding activities using

video ensures active learning – quizzes, decision making trees, scenarios, case studies and demonstrations can be enhanced by integrating video into the decision making and problem solving resources and examples available to the learner.

Hardware• Video cameras are

becoming cheap and ubiquitous.

• Standard Definition• High Definition

http://www.theflip.com.au/

Sequenced still images

A series of still images that clearly illustrate a task can be very effective.

Photos can be assembled in PhotoStory along with music and text and exported as a video

http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/digitalphotography/photostory/default.mspx

Video Formats•The AVI Format•The Windows Media Format•The MPEG Format•The MOV Format•The RealVideo Format•The Shockwave (Flash) Format•The Flash Video Format•The Mobile Video Format 3gp

Video Formats•How will we deliver to our learners?

•CD/DVD•Intranet/Internet – LMS/Blog/Wiki etc•Will the viewer need a plug in on their browser to watch the video?

•These decisions influence the codec we will use to export the final video

•Video files, which, uncompressed, are HUGE•Codec's can take a very large video file that can’t be downloaded and make it into a file that can be “streamed” online

•MOV•Flash Video (FLV)•h.264

•AVIhttp://www.zamzar.com/

•Video files, which, uncompressed, are HUGE•Codec's can take a very large video file that can’t be downloaded and make it into a file that can be “streamed” online

•MOV•Flash Video (FLV)•h.264

•AVIhttp://www.zamzar.com/

DEMODEMO

Next session Tuesday 27th April 6.30pm

Thank you for playing