Podcasting In The Classroom
Julie Barnd
Podcasting In The Classroom:
What is it?Podcasting is a fairly new technology
It is a series of audio or visual clips for people to listen to or watch
Has many different uses, not all of which are intended for the classroom
Podcasting Article One
Podcasting Article Three
Podcasting Article Two
Sources
Students will be able to record and listen to a lesson plan that was already taught.
Students can make their own podcasts so they can help themselves out and their classmates.
Podcasting Article One
Students will learn to make their own podcast:Generally takes 3-4 weeks to get use to assembling one alone
Group children together to help manage time
Brainstorm as a class before starting the podcast
Practice the recording before actually making the final copy
Record your podcast
Upload it to the program you are using
Post it for classmates to see and listen to
Podcasting in the classroom can be very beneficial. Teaching students how to use them can be very helpful as a teacher. If you record your lessons during class and then a student who studies better by audio, giving them the option of going back to the lessons for studying purposes is a great way to help children out. Many children have MP3 players, so it would be easy for them to download the lesson onto their device to listen to wherever they are to get some studying in (Shelley).
Podcasting Article Two
1. Podcasting is cheap2. Invites broader audience3. Lessens distractions4. Parents can easily become more involved5. Privacy issues6. Interactive7. Creative8. Fun
Every time a podcast is made, students and teachers, can greatly benefit from the uses of the casting.
Parents can even become involved in the everyday classroom, but listening to what was going on for the lessons and in return, be able to help their student out
It’s a great creative outlet for students to use. Many of the funding for music and/or art are being cut for schools and teachers can purchase an inexpensive microphone for cheap and let students come up with different stories (for reading time) or develop a lesson plan that involves having the students use podcasting to break the repetitiveness of the every day norm.
I really enjoyed all of the different aspects this website provided about podcasting. There were some things that I never even considered until reading them. It even stated some concerns that parents might have about the privacy of their children and some ways to help keep everyone involved in the podcast anonymous (Fryer).
Podcasting Article Three
Helps include everyone
Inexpensive
Auditory learners greatly benefit
Helps provide different ways of teaching
Children with learning disorders and hyperactivity can greatly benefit from podcasting.
Students who are absent because of illness still have the option to listen to the lesson without losing a whole day of lecture.
It can help get everyone involved by having the students download the lesson onto their MP3 player and listen to the lesson by themselves and then give feedback accordingly.
I thought it was great that this website touched on the topic of inclusion in the classroom. It is obvious, and has been proven time and time again, that every person learns differently. Some people are more visual, others more hands on, and some auditory learners. It’s a great way for children with attention deficit disorders or hyperactivity disorders to eliminate outside distractions by making them listen to the message and potentially have them doing a worksheet that coincides with the lesson on the podcast. (Lynne).
http://www.podcasting-tools.com/what-is-podcasting.htm
Fryer, Wesley. (n.d.). Tools for the teks: integrating technology in the
classroom . Retrieved from
http://www.wtvi.com/TEKS/05_06_articles/classroom-audio-
podcasting.html
Housley, Sharon. (n.d.). What is Podcasting?. Retrieved from
http://www.podcasting-tools.com/what-is-podcasting.htm
Lynne, Beth. (2007, March 26). Podcasting in the classroom. Retrieved from
http://teachingtechnology.suite101.com/article.cfm/podcast
ing_in_the_classroom
Shelley, Nathan. (n.d.). Podcasting in the classroom. Retrieved from
http://userwww.sfsu.edu/~nshelley/index.html
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