Please leave your comments about my lesson plan.
And here is the plan…
The Big Idea
Students will learn that podcasting, especially video podcasting, can be an important tool for them to use as a vehicle to express their ideas in a creative way that connects them to their learning. Through brainstorming, web-research, and reflective discussion they will answer their own question “How could video or audio podcasting help my students?”
Objectives
Students will develop their own understanding to the question “How could video or audio podcasting help my students?” through brainstorming, web-research, and reflective discussion.
- Students will be able to use internet tools to research uses of Podcasting.
- Students will be able to post their findings to their web log
- Students will be able to show understanding of how video or audio podcasting can help students by researching, citing, and responding to a minimum of three different uses.
Motivation
Audio and video podcasts allow for simultaneous presentation of materials to any one who has access to the internet and authorization to the online materials. They also provide a creative outlet for, and personal connection with, the students. We strive for quality when the product is tied to us personally.There are three reasons why we start this course with a brainstorming activity.
1. Immediately engages students in the lesson
2. Provides an avenue for personal input from the student
3. Creates an anticipatory set for rest of lesson
Starting with brainstorming also allows the teacher to start evaluating and working on improvements from day one. Have the students use the blog on their WordPress site. Set requirements of brevity, clarity, and appropriate responses.
Teacher Preparation
- Read some of the online resources about how podcasting is used by others in education
- Decide how rigorous you will be in requiring citations, depth or scope of responses, correct spelling…
- Be sure to address the differences between whether the use is for students, parents, colleagues, or self.
- Find out your school’s Acceptable Use Policy (AUP) regarding students doing Internet research, downloading material, and copying.
Presentation
Most of the students will be familiar with podcasting and blogging. The start of this activity is to brainstorm about how podcasting could help students. Before starting the activity, explain that their answers should be short (one to three words) and their own. Provide clarification of requirements, but do not suggest answers. Questions to use should be like:
- What makes a podcast a good podcast?
- What kinds of purposes can/do podcasts fulfill that other media doesn’t (slide presentations, textbooks, or a standard recording)?
- Why do we or should we care about podcasting or any other internet media?
The conclusions the students come to should revolve around things like motivation, creativity, innovation, uniqueness, support, homework…
Activity
5 minutes – Brainstorm with the students on answers to the question “How could video or audio podcasting help my students?”
10 minutes – Discuss similarities and possible groupings. If suggested uses do not focus on the student, categorize by who the use is for (e.g. self, other teachers, parents).
15 minutes – Research a minimum of three internet resources to answer the question.
15 minutes – Post citations (hyperlinked) with summary in students own words, and respond to one other summary.
Assessment
4 points – Minimum of three entries (with summaries) and one response
3 points – Two entries (with summaries) and one response
2 points – One entry (with summary) and one response
1 point – One entry (with summaries) and no response
0 points – No evidence
Closure and Lesson Extension
Reflecting on how uses of podcasting change from person to person, for the benefit of students, teachers, or parents, we will discover that it is a powerful tool when used appropriately. If allowed time, the students may research the tools required for creating their own podcast for a class project.
Resources
Vocabulary