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Add Fun and Interest to Teaching Online with Audio Clips

Add Fun and Interest to Teaching Online with Audio Clips. Sharon Beynon October 22, 2009 For audio call Toll Free 1 - 888-886-3951 and use PIN/code 306644. Housekeeping. Maximize your CCC Confer window. Mute your phone (*6) if you have visitors or noise in your office.

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Add Fun and Interest to Teaching Online with Audio Clips

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  1. Add Fun and Interest to Teaching Onlinewith Audio Clips Sharon Beynon October 22, 2009 For audio call Toll Free 1-888-886-3951 and use PIN/code 306644

  2. Housekeeping • Maximize your CCC Confer window. • Mute your phone (*6) if you have visitors or noise in your office. • Please note phone audio may be in presenter-only mode. • Ask questions over the phone when the presenter prompts. • Ask questions throughout presentation via the chat window.

  3. Adjusting your computer audio • To listen on your computer, adjust your speaker volume • If you’re using a phone, click on phone headset. • To speak you’ll need a microphone or USB headset. a) First, run the audio wizard Tools/Audio/Audio Setup Wizard. b) Second, press on the mic icon when it’s available (release when finished speaking)

  4. Saving Files & Open/close Captions • Save chat window with floppy disc icon • Open/close captioning window with CC icon

  5. Emoticons and Polling • Raise hand and Emoticons • Polling options

  6. Challenge: How to make online classes experiential in the same way face-to-face classes can be? How to create lively, interesting discussions that relate to current developments in our disciplines.

  7. Scenario! When the Nobel prize winners are announced, many of us enter class and discuss the poet or the scientist’s work with students. Using online audio/video clip posts, this sort of experience can be simulated! You post a clip, then encourage students to listen and respond in a discussion or chat room.

  8. Interest Links “Interest Links” are audio or video curriculum connections that don’t add more reading to an online class.

  9. http://nobelprize.org/award_ceremonies/lectures_2008.html

  10. New York Times Business Interactive Business Pages

  11. Interactive Quiz from the New York Times

  12. Yale Open Classroom

  13. Speaker Series in Los Angeles-- Audio, Video, MP3

  14. MIT Lectures

  15. A Useful Math Site

  16. http://www.nctm.org/resources/higheredlead.aspx

  17. Interactive Math Site

  18. www.math.com/teachers.html

  19. http://archives.math.utk.edu/k12.html

  20. http://free.ed.gov/subjects.cfm?subject_id=33

  21. The New Yorker offers several video/audio/ cartoon resources perfect to encourage discussion.

  22. Example from the Poetry Archive…

  23. Science Slideshow from the New York Times

  24. Penn Sound is another fabulous site.Here is a scholar reading parts of Piers Plowman– wish I’d had access to this as an undergrad!

  25. NPR-- a sample story that connects math to the "real" world

  26. Example Lesson:Students have read Frankenstein, they’ve discussed themes, they’ve read literary criticism, they’ve discussed the novel in the online chat rooms. They’re exhausted!

  27. Example Lession

  28. So, direct them to a few links that might interest them:Frank and climateClimate Connections: SignsDid Climate Inspire the Birth of a Monster?by Nell Greenfieldboyce

  29. NPR– a fabulous source Direct students to NPR sites like this one where weird 19th Century climate is shown to have affected Frankenstein!

  30. How to do this? - Using the Print Screen option on your computer keyboard, you can paste a screen image into your online delivery system. Either hyperlink it, or paste the web address there for students to find.

  31. Links to the sites we visited… • http://nobelprize.org/award_ceremonies/lectures_2008.html  • http://projects.nytimes.com/creditcrisis/recipients/table?ref=business •  http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/03/31/science/20090331-angier-quiz.html?ref=science  • http://oyc.yale.edu/  • http://www.zocalopublicsquare.org/  • http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/web/courses/av •  http://mathforum.org/pow/  • http://www.nctm.org/resources/higheredlead.aspx  • http://www.figurethis.org/ • http://www.math.com/teachers.html • http://archives.math.utk.edu/k12.html • http://free.ed.gov/subjects.cfm?subject_id=33 • http://www.newyorker.com/online/multimedia/festival2008 • http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/singlePoem.do?poemId=1393 • http://www.nytimes.com/pages/science/index.html • http://media.sas.upenn.edu/pennsound/authors/Economou/Piers-Plowman/Economou-George_01_Introduction_Piers-Plowman_KWH_5-17-07.mp3  • http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=103192569 • http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=12384794 • http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=12688403

  32. Conclusion • Interest Links add flavor and fun to the sometimes dull work of an online class. • These are easy to implement and useful for addressing various learning styles and course contents. Thanks for attending!

  33. Sharon Beynon sbeynon@cuesta.edu Q&A

  34. Evaluation Survey Link Help us improve our seminars by filing out a short online evaluation survey at: http://tinyurl.com/ONEeval-09F-AudioClips

  35. Thanks for Attending For upcoming desktop seminars and links to recently archived seminars, check the @ONE Web site at: http://onefortraining.org/seminars/

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