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Top ten uses of video in education

Top ten uses of video in education. Clive Young , VideoAktiv, Spain/UK clive.young@gcal.ac.uk Helle Meldgaard , UNI-C, UniVid, Denmark helle.meldgaard@uni-c.dk www.videointeraktiv.org/blog/images/. VideoAktiv – staff development.

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Top ten uses of video in education

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  1. Top ten uses of video in education Clive Young, VideoAktiv, Spain/UK clive.young@gcal.ac.uk Helle Meldgaard, UNI-C, UniVid, Denmark helle.meldgaard@uni-c.dk www.videointeraktiv.org/blog/images/

  2. VideoAktiv – staff development Helping non-specialist teachers and lecturers develop video / audio resources

  3. Who already uses video? • Frequently • Media and cultural studies • Performing arts • Vocational media training • Occasionally • Languages • Medicine / Sports / Natural sciences • Rarely • Chemistry, Physics, Civil Engineering • Education (but Teachers TV in UK) / Social Science • Almost never • Accountancy, Law, Philosophy Nursing, Social sciences • Computing, Engineering, Software engineering

  4. How can I design and produce effective video resources? ideas, models of use, descriptions, practical tips, models of design, process guides, vocabulary, examples, evaluation …and it’s getting more complicated!

  5. Image + Interactivity + Integration Getting ever more complex? • Film strip/slide • TV / VHS • Desktop video • Multimedia • Web media • Streaming • Mobile video = 1K words Constructvism Conversation Context Multimodalities Multiliteracies

  6. Why video? (NSF project) Teachers’ view: • High attractiveness for students/ learners • Better retention factor • Effective time management • Better interactivity • Increased marketability of users – students/learners • On-demand or personalised education/training • Unlimited replay • No geographical boundaries • Student-centered paradigm of education Uskov (2005) Technology for advanced e-learning

  7. Why video? (NSF project) Students’ view: 1. Navigate and search within a streaming video and presentation 2. Hyperlinks with immediate access to knowledge resources 3. Available 24/7/365 for anybody and from anywhere 4. More easily and rapidly absorbed than when reading a textbook 5. Can incorporate graphical animations, simulations etc. 6. Variety of playback devices (… potentially handheld devices?) 7. No need to purchase expensive textbooks 8. Hands -on exercises 9. High level of student-to-student/faculty interactivity to complement streaming media-based class (lecture). 10. ‘Virtual professor’, his/her body language, intonation, articulation, etc. creates a better learning environment than just reading.

  8. Cone of learning

  9. Using digital video in education

  10. “Talking Head” lectures, tutorials © McGill University

  11. “Talking Head” lectures, tutorials http://stream.port.ac.uk/heather/introecon/interact/kh1.html

  12. Archive video material http://www.dr.dk/skole

  13. Screencasts and 'Camtasia'

  14. Screencasts and ‘photo to movie'

  15. Instructional 'how to videos' http://www.bbctraining.com/onlineCourse.asp?tID=5914&cat=2781http://www.channel4.com/fourdocs/guides

  16. Interviewing an expert

  17. Video blogs 'think aloud' http://www.abdn.ac.uk/alsu/VideoGallery/index_DSL.shtml

  18. Case studies and simulations

  19. Videoing 'real events' in situ

  20. Performance + feedback

  21. Top 10 uses: educational video 10. Talking head lectures and tutorials 9. Using authentic archive video material 8. Animated screen shots 'Camtasia‘ / ‘Photo to Movie’ 7. Instructional 'how to videos' of a practical activity 6. Interviewing an expert or expert presentation 5. Video blogs 'think aloud' 4. Video case studies/simulations/role plays 3. Videoing 'real events' in situ 2. Presentation/performance skills and feedback

  22. Students design own video • Focus on student rather than on teacher • Student as co-creator of knowledge • Video as process rather than on product

  23. Our Video Top Ten 1. Students design and shoot own video 2. Presentation/performance skills, feedback 3. Videoing 'real events' in situ 4. Video case studies/simulations/role plays and discussion 5. Video blogs 'think aloud' 6. Interviewing an expert or expert presentation 7. Instructional 'how to videos' 8. Animated screen shots 'Camtasia‘ / ‘Photo to Movie’ 9. Using authentic archive video material 10. Talking head lectures and tutorials

  24. Cone of learning

  25. Our Video Top Ten • UniVid – Dialogue tool for planning of video on the net: http://www.forskningsnettet.dk/univideng • VideoAktiv: http://www.videoaktiv.org • VideoAktiv Blog:http://www.videointeraktiv.org/blog • Click And Go Video: http://www.clickandgovideo.ac.uk/ • Slides • www.videointeraktiv.org/blog/images/

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