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Michele Mathieson

Quick-edit Videography with iMovie for iPad « Moving at the Speed of Creativity - 1 views

  • 1. Start an iPad iMovie by clicking the “+” icon at the bottom of the screen.
  • 2. Click the video window to show available videos on the iPad. These are videos which have been saved to the Photo Roll. Click the arrow on a video to insert it into your project where the playhead (the red line) is positioned.
  • 3. Note as videos are inserted into a project, iMovie for iPad adds a yellow border around them in the video library. This makes them appear different from other videos so you can identify ones not yet imported into the project. (They won’t have a colored border around them.) Also notice the total time of the imported video is shown at the end of the last clip.
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  • 4. Click the settings icon (it looks like a gear) in the upper right corner to choose a theme for your project. My favorite is the CNN iReport theme, since it allows you to show your location as well as a project title at the start of your video.
  • 5. To “split” a clip into two parts, first drag the clip so the playhead (red line) is on the spot where you want it split. Think of a split like you are cutting the video into two pieces with a virtual knife. Click on the clip ONCE to select it. It should be highlighted in yellow when selected.
  • 6. Next, swipe your finger down, across the clip over the red playhead line. This will split the clip into two pieces.
  • 7. Double click a clip to make changes to the settings for it. These include setting a title, a location (used in the opening title of the iReport theme) and adjusting the clip’s audio level. Individual clips can also be deleted from this menu.
  • 8. Select the Title Style and choose the desired option. Color and formatting differences apply to different title styles. The iReport theme includes three styles for the opening, middle and ending of the video.
  • 9. Text can be entered for each title style by touching the “Title Text Here” area in the video preview window. Text will resize automatically to fit in the space provided.
  • 11. Click the MY PROJECTS tab at the top of the screen to return to the starting menu for iMovie for iPad. Click the title to change it as desired.
  • 12. Individual clips can be trimmed by clicking on them once to select them. This will reveal “trimming handles” which look like dots above the starting and ending points of a clip. Drag these trimming handles to the left or right to shorten or lengthen a clip as desired.
  • 13. Transitions are automatically inserted between different clips in your iMovie. Click on the transition icon between clips to modify it. By default a cross-dissolve transition is used.
  • 14. When you are finished editing and ready to publish your project, click the MY PROJECTS tab at the top to return to the home screen. Then click the publish icon at the bottom of the screen, which looks like a box with an arrow on it. Select the desired location for sharing.
  • 15. Enter the desired title, description, category and tags for your video. Additionally, choose the size to share (large is recommended) and the privacy settings.
  • 16. Click SHARE in the upper right corner. Your video will now EXPORT into a compressed format
  • 17. After your video is published, iMovie will display a screen with the option to TELL A FRIEND. If you select this option, you can email yourself the direct link to your video.
Michele Mathieson

Math Movies - home - 0 views

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    Wouldn't it be fun to have our students make a few of these videos and post them on this page? It looks like they have videos from a variety of places. Check out the math addition videos for ideas.
Michele Mathieson

KeepVid: Download and save any video from Youtube, Dailymotion, Metacafe, iFilm and more! - 7 views

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    Easy online program to download YouTube videos.
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    This would be awesome but it looks like have to purchase a license to actually use it. True? Not true? Maybe I just have to try it to find out...
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    Don't need to purchase. Put the url from YouTube in the download box at top, click download. Down a little bit you will see a thumbnail of the video you want appear. Click on MP4 and it will download for you to your download folder. I will try and highlight these spots on the article - hopefully you will be able to view my highlights!
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    Thanks, Michele. I tried your instructions and it did work!! But, the website is quite confusing. I ended up downloading the software (twice. duh.) before I figured out how to actually download the video I wanted. And, when I first tried the download I got the message that the download was blocked by the website the video was on (NPR) -- I found the same video on youtube and downloaded it with KeepVid. So, give yourself some time to play with this before you intend to use it!
lisacetroni

From Worms to Wall Street: Projects Prompt Active, Authentic Learning | Edutopia - 6 views

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    If you haven't already seen this 2001 video, it's worth the 7 minutes. It's really about a PBL Elementary School in VA. I think it helps me wrap my mind around the role of the teacher in these class projects. Questioning is key!
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    I'd love to know what this school in Newport News is doing now, more than 10 years later. Certainly worth viewing this video.
Michele Mathieson

Science Videos - 3 views

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    Pam- This looks intersting - Variety of videos explaining the science behind current event stories, sports, everday life
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    Michele, these are great! I good way to connect science to what students experience every day. Thank you!
Michele Mathieson

mindresearch's Channel - YouTube - 0 views

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    Youtube videos about ST Math.
lisacetroni

Videos | Project Based Learning | BIE - 4 views

shared by lisacetroni on 14 Feb 12 - No Cached
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    Check out some videos of Elementary School projects.
lisacetroni

Project Based Learning in K-2 video | BIE - 2 views

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    It's rare to find a video specific to PBL in K-2. It goes along with the book PBL in the Elementary Grades. Lindsay and I currently have copies of the book if you want to borrow it.
Michele Mathieson

Videos & Tutorials - diigo help - 1 views

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    Diigo tutorial videos
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    I found the introductory tutorial very helpful.
Michele Mathieson

primaryvideo - Mathematics Novemberlearning - 1 views

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    A wiki from Kathy Cassidy with a lot of links to educational videos for young learners. Click on subject on left side and check out some good short videos you might be able to use in your classroom.
Michele Mathieson

Kidblog | Teachinghistory.org - 0 views

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    Examples  So how can using a blog help students learn history? There are limitless ways to use the website, but there are a few strategies that work particularly well in the elementary environment. When first starting a unit, create a "KWL chart" on your blog. Have students blog about what they know, what they want to know, and eventually what they have learned. Students will be able to see other posts and scaffold their learning off the responses of others. As the educator, you can quickly assess, focus, and possibly redirect your unit to meet the specific needs of your students. Have students blog about what they know, what they want to know, and eventually what they have learned. Another way to use Kidblog is to post video or audio clips. After our unit on the early 20th century, students viewed and listened to footage of Teddy Roosevelt and Franklin Roosevelt on Kidblog. Students had to decide who was a better president, and they blogged reasons to support their choices. Knowing that the writing was being presented to classmates encouraged a focus on the published quality.
john russell

Howard Gardner - 0 views

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    Hi All, Here is a video with Howard Gardner discussing the five new minds. This is a follow-up to my brief talk last Tuesday. Enjoy ! John
Michele Mathieson

Main Course Not Dessert | FreeBIEs | Tools | Project Based Learning | BIE - 12 views

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    This is the article Lisa put in everyone's mailbox. Please comment here.
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    Love the idea of serving up the main course to our young learners! So important to recognize that so much out there may really just be dessert...
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    This article made me think of a project I did recently with fourth grade, in which they researched and produced a food web using their choice of iPad apps. Was it better than my previous food web activity (cutting and pasting pictures to a piece of construction paper)? Definitely. But, not surprisingly, it was immensely time-consuming, particularly when I only see my classes twice each week. A five-session project translated into 2 1/2 weeks of science time, and the quality of the students' work would have benefited from at least one more class period for revisions. How do we decide if the skills that students learn with a "main course" project are valuable enough to give up the consistent content base our students get from more traditional forms of classroom instruction?
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    I have tried to create quite a few pbl based projects over the years in both history and mathematics. I agree it takes a lot of time, but I do think the time spent is well worth it. The skills in collaboration, problems solving, critical thinking and research cannot not be duplicated through dessert projects. In younger grades, I do think some filling in of content needs to be done through other types of instruction, mainly because young children do not have as deep a pool of prior knowledge and skills. For example in the latest pbl I did, the kids had great enthusiasm, worked hard, gathered amazing information, but then lacked the skill to pull it all into as meaningful end results as I had hoped they would. Luckily I had Lisa there to videotape the lessons and I was able to see that my students need some mini lessons in how to figure out which content from their research is important to put into the end product. I do believe that they will remember the information gained much better than if i had simply presented it, let them read and then had them do a project at the end. Critical to the success of pbl is ample classroom time .... Flexibility in schedule, large chunks of time and not having large gaps between different sessions is critical. Too often we lose a class because of changes to the schedule and that further widens the gap between meetings. Discontinuity of schedule hinders the process.
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    I'm wondering if other teachers think PBL is a component of interdisciplinary studies with the addition of the leading, premise question. From this article, one would not think the arts would have a significant place in PBL. Hopefully, the arts are included in the teacher collaborations of PBL, as the arts help to facilitate the 21St century skills: collaboration, creative and critical thinking, emotional intelligence and various mediums of communication. (Eisner, Gardner, BrIce-Heath etc.) I think it would be great to include more PBL at St. Anne's with the requisite amount of collaborative, inter-departmental planning time. I tend to think of PBL as a comprehensive project. In my mind, the primary grades project discussed in "Primary Preoccupation" was an example of experiential learning, not necessarily PBL.
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    As I begin to think about creating this type of learning envirnoment, I am thinking... I need to be able to devise real "problems" or "situations" that my students can actually see as something that they need to solve. I am wondering, how can I create a problem that relates to Ancient Greece that my students believe really needs to be solved.
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    After reading Kathleen's comments above, I also wonder how my role as a second grade teacher fits into PBL. I am thinking, is it sufficient to begin to lay the foundation for PBL by teaching through student inquiry which includes student choice of what questions to ask and how to present the information? I believe that I may need to lay a foundation for children, a "prior knowledge" in the first several lessons of a unit in order for them to handle seeking out answers to new questions, developing a plan of action, and presenting a final work. I adapted a lesson in history today so that student partnerships had to gather information about Pocahontas in several different texts instead of me only reading aloud the information and then discussing as a class. I am at the point now where I need feedback about the changes I made in the lesson to see if I am moving in the right direction. I look forward to the opportunity to bounce ideas around.
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    I have a very similar train of thought as what Pam wrote above. I do a lot of PBL in the LS Spanish program in most grade levels, but especially in third and fourth, we will work on something that stretches over a few classes, or even sometimes a few weeks, when I only see them once or twice a week. With language learning, the repetition and focus on these kinds of projects reflects the students deepened understanding of the content targeted, which for me, makes the project more worthwhile than moving through a larger amount of content in the same time as a long project. The catch is that I feel that the curriculum has more content than I can cover if we do that "deepened" understanding through PBL...I would rather have less "topics" in my curriculum and more time to go more in depth with the time I do have with the kids.
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    The examples of schools using PBL were all at the high school level. I assume that students have had a chance to master the basics. A PBL experience for a younger student has to take more time in order to learn some basic skills such as research, pulling information together, figuring out the main idea and writing that makes sense. I see a huge value in PBL because the student has to take ownership and responsibility for their work. I liked the library of tested project ideas mentioned.
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    So far everything I have read or seen - in video presentations - about PBL has focused upon high school students/projects. They describe, in this article, that students need "to use higher-order thinking skills and learn to work as a team. They must listen to others and make their own ideas clear when speaking, be able to read a variety of material, write or otherwise express themselves in various modes, and make effective presentations." These are the skills that are needed in order to begin answering a driving question. I believe in projects - pourquoi stories, Ancient China museums, etc. - but I also think that our job, as elementary school teachers, is to teach these basic skills so that they can then be used for PBL in middle and upper school. These are my preliminary thoughts, as I begin to learn about this type of learning.
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    I wonder how to adapt this to elementary level work. I think that the teacher who came from November Learning (the Canadian woman who teaches first grade) could be a good resourse. And of course Kathleen can probably demystify us as she has been doing some of this. I also think that it would be hugely helpful to collaborate as grade level teams to come up with ideas for PBL - maybe just one per gl- that we can try and then regroup and tweak. Making it truly "main course" is going to require some thinking. But it sounds exciting. At the end of the article the author lists certain conditions that make this type of learning/teaching/curriculum feasable. We have some work to do to meet those benchmarks. What are your thoughts on developing project libraries? How will we create time for teachers to "meet with colleagues, plan projects, critique and fine tune lessons and gather and share resources" ?
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    Any effort to promote greater reflection and opportunities for revision is important. This appears to be an important feature of PBL--as it should be. I also like the focus on open-ended DQ(Dairy Queens or Driving Questions).
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    Lisa K. -- the projects I remember were probably a hybrid. I don't recall any driving questions, but sometimes, I was researching ... Teaching myself something that hadn't been taught in the classroom. I learned only very basic critical skills, but that was the age of the encyclopedia. I learned to consider the background and education of the author. To me, the key is applying the information thoughtfully and creatively. I think a good starting point is taking the projects we're already doing and taking a closer look. How can they be more meaningful for our students? How can we use projects to teach Lucas' basic skills? TLT time can be used for planning.
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    I enjoy the idea of a Driving Question. I also appreciate the aspect of small group and independent work this type of learning seems to facilitate. I am curious about how to involve a public audience in more ways than the typical end of drama presentation.
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    In the PBL introductory handbook, from BIE, I'm glad they acknowledged the findings of Dewey and what he initiated. It reminded me of the importance of student engagement. My wife, Maureen, and I did our masters in teacher education at George Mason and one of the crucial findings was that engagement is imperative in learning. PBL seems to recognize the importance of this engagement.
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    When I think about the kindergarten moon unit, I realize we really do PBL. This unit is student driven (they decide what they want to know) and a learning adventure. Enhanced by technology... we research using books, drawings, e-video clips, internet books and websites (NASA.gov) Children connect and problem solve and end up teaching each other with words, posters, drawings etc.
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    This is Leo: PBL really excites me. This type of learning puts the focus on the student. The teacher then acts as a guide, rather than the sole knowledge provider. Students in turn take pride and ownership over their area of focus. I would love to add more types of PBL into my teaching, but need to find creative ways to incorporate this into our busy schedule.
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    I value a lot of the ideas (choice, authentic audience, 21st Century skills) presented in PBL. I just don't know how to incorporate it or totally revise my classroom to make it work. I'm interested in hearing how to make this work with elementary classrooms.
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    I have similar feelings as Kathleen, in that often the excitement is there, but the means to culminate a final project is difficult with younger students. I find PBL quite interesting, but I do feel that starting smaller and working up to larger, more in-depth projects may be 'safer' as it is new for our students as well as many of us. We can find how it would work with our age groups, content, and specific classrooms then scaffold from there.
Michele Mathieson

Screenr - mrbillyspicer: Video tutorial on how to embed Animoto videos into Kidblog. - 1 views

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    Embed Animotos on Kidblogs!
Karen Gray

Writers Speak to Kids - 0 views

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    Video segments of authors talking about their work
Michele Mathieson

YouTube epub - 0 views

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    Video showing Pages doc export as ePub
Michele Mathieson

Move Over, Sal Khan: Sixth-Graders Create Their Own Math Videos! | MindShift - 1 views

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    Mentioned during November Learning. Great ideas for student created tutorials.
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    Great advice: "Just let the kids touch the computers!" we're going to do that!
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    yes, the idea of explaining a math concept and recording it is great! I plan to use Show Me to try this- I can start this right away to explain math games for game night.
Michele Mathieson

Announcing Screencasting in Snagit for Google Chrome - 0 views

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    If you are using Google Chrome, this is a great extension to add. It allows you to both do a screen capture and/or a screencasting (capture in video mode what you are doing on your computer when on Google Chrome).
Michele Mathieson

NL Information Literacy on Vimeo - 0 views

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    Excellent short videos on the Get Real web literacy strategy.
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