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Alisa Cooper

Cinch - Create and share micro podcasts, images and text updates on CinchCast.com - 1 views

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    Basically, Cinch lives up to its name by making podcasting a cinch. Users can upload audio from a smartphone application, by dialling a number from their mobile phone or by uploading via the website using their computer. It just makes podcasting so easy!
Alisa Cooper

Podcasting Tools - 0 views

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    This site is a comprehensive podcasting resource detailing everything you need to know about Podcasting
Alisa Cooper

Podcast FAQ - About Podcasting - 0 views

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    Good informational site on podcasting.
Alisa Cooper

Create text-to-speech (TTS) podcast from RSS feed for iPod, iPhone, MP3 player and mobi... - 1 views

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    Odiogo empowers you to convert your blog posts into high quality audio files.
Alisa Cooper

25 Free Digital Audio Editors You Should Know - 1 views

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    Podcasting tools.
befitt :)

ipadio - phonecast live to the World, any phone, anywhere - 0 views

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    Oooh... new tool! :)
Shelley Rodrigo

News: Professors and Social Media - Inside Higher Ed - 1 views

    • Shelley Rodrigo
       
      Yeah, but which one? And in what capacity? YouTube can just be more "sage on the stage" or, I'm being generous, sage vetted alternative content delivery material.
    • Peter Combs
       
      It depends. Checkout www.tinyurl.com/ycLL4dq It's a group of math grad students who run a website for math review for accuplacer, sat, act, etc. MCCCD testing centers gives out free booklets for math review for the accuplacer. Accuplacer sells math review for their own placement tests. But read the equations and they just bounce off your eyes and fall to the flloor. However, watch the math grads on youtube explain it and even people who took math 30 years ago say "oh yeah, I remember how to solve those quadratic equations."
    • Shelley Rodrigo
       
      Peter, I know...and that is part of the point I was making in my talk! Thanks for sharing the example!
    • Shelley Rodrigo
       
      Notice who funded this research! This is not surprise considering some of the criticism about who funds the various research projects and organizations support "21st Century Skills."
    • Peter Combs
       
      Yes, and coal companies pay ASU professors mucho dinero to prove there is no global warming. Coal money also pays for lots of TA's & RA's ... keep Deans happy and ASU in the top 60 research institutes in the US.
    • Shelley Rodrigo
       
      Yes, I knew it! However, YouTube can be interactive, a read/write technology. I wonder if those professors using YouTube actually have YouTube accounts, know how to favorite, rate, reply, and respond? How many have their own channels and actually publish stuff? 
    • Peter Combs
       
      Hmm, how many online teachers answer their email? (present company excluded!!) ;-) I didn't like podcasts for a long time because I can read faster than most people talk. Then I discovered I could clean house while listening to podcasts and I changed my tune.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Skype, LinkedIn, MySpace, Flickr, Slideshare, or Google Wave
  • The data suggest that 80 percent of professors, with little variance by age, have at least one account with either Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Skype, LinkedIn, MySpace, Flickr, Slideshare, or Google Wave
  • Nearly 60 percent kept accounts with more than one
  • a quarter used at least four
  • A majority, 52 percent, said they used at least one of them as a teaching tool.
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    Video IS this generation's myths & stories. Some linguists say visual symbols are the basis of language and that's why we dream. In English, an instructor could engage students by interspersing video clips of "Prospero's Books" with "The Tempest." Most instructors in science for non-science majors know a movie is de rigueur just before evaluation day! ;-)
Alisa Cooper

Read The Words - 0 views

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    ReadTheWords.com is a free, web based service that assists people with written material. We do this by using TTS Technology, or Text To Speech Technology. Users of our service can generate a clear sounding audio file from almost any written material. We generate a voice that reads the words out loud, that you request us to read.
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