Screencasting: Make your presentations do the talking!
Transcription
Screencasting: Make your presentations do the talking!
2/5/09 Presented by Mitch Lambert & Chris Carman Theodore Roosevelt High School Kent, Ohio What is screencasting? captures what is displayed on a computer screen accompanied by explanatory commentary …just a fancy term for recording a movie of your computer screen to a file that others can view Possible uses for screencasting: as a recording of a classroom lesson as standalone tutorials, software demos, or orientation to clarify complex technical concepts to teach demonstrate how to use a piece of software or a web service 1 2/5/09 Podcasting vs. screencasting Podcasting: audio only good primarily for aural learners can be played in almost any media program generally easy to edit after recorded Screencasting: audio and video good for visual and aural learners generally played in web browsers more challenging to edit after recorded Why screencast? more engaging and interactive than written instructions and static photos or illustrations the screencasting medium can communicate what otherwise cannot be explained easily, if at all Why screencast? (continued) the use of audio, text, and video appeals to different learning styles relative ease of use and lower cost tools can help people share information in an intuitive and effective way can easily be published and distributed via blogs, tags, video hosting services and social media services, giving them greater social relevance 2 2/5/09 Why I screencast: increased communication with students accommodates multiple learning styles students who miss a class due to illness can stay with the entire classroom discussion Why I screencast: (continued) when things get complicated, students can see it more than once having the screencast available on the web 24/7 can help save time and provide "just in time" access to students and parents The quote that sold me: “I'm a visual learner, so listening to my favorite bloggers takes more mental energy to absorb than reading their blog entries. When I click on a library tutorial and see static pages of text, I rarely even bother to read it. When I see a movie that illustrates step-by-step how to accomplish the task, I am more likely to stay for the show.” - Meredith Farkas, February 28, 2005 3 2/5/09 A thought: If a picture is worth a thousand words, maybe a movie is worth a thousand pictures... Screencasting equipment: Required: computer microphone wired or wireless screencasting software Internet connection Optional: headphones SMARTBoard drawing tablet instead of SMARTBoard The screencasting process: Record presentation Convert video to SWF Upload to blog or web server 4 2/5/09 Software packages tested: I experimented with three different programs: Bulent’s Screen recorder Shareware - $40-80 to register http://www.thesilver.net/ Camstudio Freeware – open source http://camstudio.org/ SMART Recorder Free – included with SMARTBoard software http://smarttech.com/ Can also be used without a SMARTBoard Bulent’s Screen Recorder: Pros: Cons: Most options With the Movie Lab software you can do almost anything you imagine Can record separately and synch the audio Can convert to multiple formats Costs much less than Camtasia, but it isn’t free Until it’s registered, it leaves 4 watermarks, one in each corner Its options make it inherently a bit more difficult to use CamStudio: Pros: Cons: It can record to AVI video file, straight to SWF, or convert between them It’s free It’s relatively simple to learn and use It does many things but the interface stays simple It comes with its own lossless codec that produces crystal clear results with a much smaller file size It can’t record audio directly from internal audio (i.e. if your presentation has sounds) 5 2/5/09 SMART Recorder: Pros: Cons: The simplest and easiest interface to use It’s free Many educators already have the software It can be used without a SMARTBoard It flat-out works! AVI video file must be converted to SWF for posting Some screencasting tips: I use a wireless mic for recording lessons where I’m more interactive with the students (I move around quite a bit). For complex lessons (or multiple day lessons) I make a shortened screencast (the video can be paused) that is very focused and not so large. I tried recording the audio separate and then syncing it. It worked, but it was a bit too much work for me. Web resources: http://screencastingprimer.wikispaces.com/primer Screencasting primer http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/digitalmedia/ 2005/11/16/what-is-screencasting.html Another primer http://labnol.blogspot.com/2005/05/screencasting-to-helpyour-mom.html Primer and review http://www.shambles.net/pages/staff/screencast/ Review of software http://www.donationcoder.com/Reviews/Archive/ ScreenCasting/ Review of software http://youtube.com/watch?v=6ZuktL23XI8 Teacher tutorial of BSR and Recorder http://www.teachertube.com/view_video.php? viewkey=90f19c78c75bd1e06f21 Tutorial of camstudio 6