I chose to set up my podcast with the view of providing students with an easier, more accessible, visual way to learn to do more with the tools that are available to them. I have heard so many students complain that they don’t have access to animation software, or to high-powered presentation tools that they see visiting lecturers use to create powerful presentations that hold people’s attention. I am trying to teach them that most of those presentations that wow them so thoroughly were created with the same tools that we have access to, PowerPoint, Publisher, web-based animation tools, etc. If I can present these little tutorials that show them that they can, in fact, do the things they want to do with the tools that they already have, I believe it will help to alleviate not only the discontent with the status quo, but also help to alleviate some of the gadget-envy that goes among teenagers in our school.
Here is the first of the videos for that podcast:
I also have a MyPodcast.com account that I have started using for my Spanish classes where I will be posting sound clips of the vocabulary being pronounced and translated. If I can work out an efficient way to do it, I will eventually migrate that over here and have the students be able to see and hear the vocabulary and translations at the same time. Currently, however, the only efficient way I have worked out for that is to use Jing and simply type the vocabulary as I say them. I know this would not really hold the attention of the students any more than the even simpler, more efficient audio recordings. So, if anyone knows how to manage the type of video that RSAnimate used in the video about students reaching a disaster point, please let me know. I believe that something like that would truly hold more attention than anything that I can currently do with these tools.
One thing that I have always believed about my teaching is that there has to be a way for students to get the little things that we spend so much time on without losing out so much on the bigger and deeper objectives that we so often neglect or fail to give sufficient time for exploration. I believe that ultimately the podcast or some form thereof will be useful for providing those basic instructions and information so that we can spend more time personally working on the deeper understanding and the transference skills that we all complain that students don’t have.
There is also another goal that I hope to work on in the future (maybe this summer), in which I will create a podcast system for school announcements. Then, we would be able to have our announcements done as usual (whatever the usual system is for the particular school in question) and also have them recorded and available for students to listen to later in the day or even from home if they missed the announcements or if they want to check out exactly was said in a particular announcement.
I believe the primary hindrances to the achievement of the goals that we set for ourselves in education are a lack of vision and understanding of what is possible and truly necessary. Too many teachers, administrators, parents, and even students are convinced that these new technologies and new knowledges are not only unnecessary, but also distract students from what is most important – a fundamental, basic education.
If I could wave a magic wand, I would have those people understand that there is no such thing as perfect, but that we must change with the times in order to continue to survive and thrive as a profession. If students continue to be more connected than the schools that are supposed to be serving them, it will soon reach a point where more students are getting their education from questionable sources online and through podcasts than are learning anything in school. Already, I have students bringing me “lessons” that they find online that contradict everything that we teach in English classes. If we can get into this electronic medium, we can put more valid and useful information into the hands of the students who are already out there looking for that information.