Students always need more time. Especially with video projects, in which I gave them 3 reminders of when they had to have things due. I gave them reminders each class of where they should be at, what they should have done. Come due date, 8 students of 28 had them ready. Two more turned theirs in two days later. It frustrated me that I try many ways to tell them to get work in on time and properly done, yet they still do not measure up.
On the other hand, blogging has been quite successful with my students. My juniors worked hard and were engaged by the discussion and responses of blogging, though it was used more as a discussion forum.
Friday, April 10, 2009
Monday, March 30, 2009
Videos One More Time
I really enjoyed doing the video activity with my students. They were certainly entertained and engaged throughout the assignment. Most finished their videos, while other got stuck at the crucial final editing stage: merging the sound and film. All in all, though, it seemed like a great assignment and I made a much-improved product over years past.
Monday, March 23, 2009
Video Editting!
Here is one example of students all working on the filming portion of my Rwandan Genocide video editing assignment. Students had to choose video clips from stock video and then record their own scripts using Audacity. This class worked really hard on this assignment and I made sure that they would be placed in groups they would be comfortable with. Below is a better example of one such group recording their voiceovers.
Monday, March 9, 2009
Video Editting
I am creating an assignment that involves using clips to be made into a voice-over podcast. PBS had responded to me regarding using their footage, so I need to just crop the clips into small sections and get rid of the sound. This attempt is a complete shot in the dark into how this will turn out, but I am only experimenting with one class. Any advice from my faithful viewers?
So Far, So Good
Thus far into the online conversations in my blog, I have noticed some students really taking off in discussing and arguing their opinions. I had several underachieving students tell me they enjoy blogging and discussing ideas in a non-threatening environment. If you would like to take a look, the blog is http://chsjohnson.blogspot.com
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Taking a Stab
I created my own blog for student use, dealing mainly with the use of the Atomic bomb. Students really took to writing their opinions and discussing the ideas. However, some students need to have semantic lessons as they can be pejorative without realizing it with such comments as ", son" or ", pal" etc that, in text, can be taken poorly.
This shows to me that this type of activity is certainly possible and doable as many students were entertained and engaged. I certainly am going to try one for World Geography.
This shows to me that this type of activity is certainly possible and doable as many students were entertained and engaged. I certainly am going to try one for World Geography.
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Video Editing
I have been thinking about a project I have done every year that was successful in retention, failure in assignment. It is about the Rwandan Genocide for World Geography. I have done a research paper (all of 1 page), a news article, and last year I tried making a video that bombed as students are horrible at doing things on time and efficiently.
After seeing video editing as a significant part of the video making process, perhaps I can control better the content by having students not film, but voice over stock footage of the genocide. I would find and have available multiple clips and have students order them however they want and tell the story as they see fit.
After seeing video editing as a significant part of the video making process, perhaps I can control better the content by having students not film, but voice over stock footage of the genocide. I would find and have available multiple clips and have students order them however they want and tell the story as they see fit.
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