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Doug Holton

iPad Screencasting: Educreations and Explain Everything - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of... - 0 views

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    In practice, we found Explain Everything to be more useful to our teaching than Educreations. While the simple screencasts of Educreations are fun to create, truly effective delivery of content such as screencasts depend on flexibility, and that means owning the video output directly. Since Educreations hosts videos only on its own site and only provides various linking and embedding options, neither students nor teachers can download them. Explain Everything offers full ownership and possession of the videos hosted at YouTube, or in MP4 format when downloaded from DropBox
Doug Holton

9 insightful videos about using SMART Boards in the Classroom | Emerging Education Tech... - 0 views

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    Today we move that effort forward by providing a number of videos that help us better understand how these devices work and what we can do with them in the classroom.
Doug Holton

Free Technology for Teachers: 7 Good Screen Capture Tools for Teachers - 3 views

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    Here are seven tools that you can use to create annotated screen capture images and screencast videos.
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    Great Post! This article will be of great help for teachers. Amongst all the seven, i feel Jing tool is helpful for my students as they are completely comfortable using this screen capture tool. They use it with their own knowledge and they don't require much help while using it.
Doug Holton

Resource: Minds of Our Own - 0 views

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    Why don't even the brightest students truly grasp simple science concepts? These video programs pick up on the questions asked in the Private Universe documentary and further explore how children learn. Based on recent research, as well as the pioneering work of Piaget and others, Minds of Our Own shows that many of the things we assume about how children learn are simply not true. For educators and parents, these programs bring new insight to debates about education reform. 1. Can We Believe Our Eyes?  Why is it that students can graduate from MIT and Harvard, yet not know how to solve a simple third-grade problem in science: lighting a light bulb with a battery and wire? Beginning with this startling fact, this program systematically explores many of the assumptions that we hold about learning to show that education is based on a series of myths. Through the example of an experienced teacher, the program takes a hard look at why teaching fails, even when he uses all of the traditional tricks of the trade. The program shows how new research, used by teachers committed to finding solutions to problems, is reshaping what goes on in our nation's schools
Doug Holton

A Look at the New iTunes U | Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

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    iTunes U has, up 'til now, been just that: files to download. Although most of the content is lecture podcasts (in video or audio form), there have also been course documents and slideshows as well.
Doug Holton

Lecture Fail? - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 2 views

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    Last month, we began inviting students across the countries to fire up their Web cameras or camera-phones to send us video commentaries about whether lectures work for them. Below are highlights from the first batch of submissions, which are full of frustration with "PowerPoint abuse" - professors' poor use of slide software that dumps too much information on students in a less-than-compelling fashion.
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