Friday, October 28, 2011
Podcast
(Assessment) The podcast project is a good one for students because it shakes up students' expectations and lays bare the process that goes into creating much of the audio they encounter on a daily basis. By seeing how audio clips can be split, cut and blended together they can detect tricks that are used to hide the seams in the audio they encounter (Reflection). The format is widely different from the standard 5-paragraph essay; students must be audibly engaging and must condense their points to account for the fact that audiences can't as easily reread when they miss something important (Integration). It stretches their brains so that they can work with ideas in a wider variety of contexts. In the future I will have students make podcasts so that they can better understand media technology (Integration).
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Google Earth
(Assessment) The Google Earth technology has great potential to help students contextualize places they've never been to. (Reflection) Not only can they see what two different places look like and the distance between them (as they can with the already potent combination of google image search and google maps), they can also witness the journey from one to the other itself with Google Earth's trip planning features. This gives them a more accurate idea of the relationship between times and distances. I plan to use Google Earth to help students understand the length of the journey the Joads take in the Grapes of Wrath (integration).
Saturday, October 8, 2011
iMovie
(Assessment) iMovie is a (relatively) intuitive interface and a vital tool for expanding students' literacy. Giving students the opportunity to conceptualize, plan, shoot and edit a movie will take them into the minds of those who create the audio-visual experiences that permeate their lives. I believe it can help give students an understanding of what this technology is capable of and the subtle tweaks it can enact upon an image, thereby allowing them to better distinguish fantasy from reality when reviewing images and sounds (Reflection). As an English teacher, I plan to use imovie to teach students how manipulating sound and images is similar to manipulating words, and how both can craft our expectations and thinking (integration).
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