Top Banner
Digital Video & Media to Enhance Literacy Dennis Barry’s WoW Project ED 5670 – Literacy & Technology
12

Back in the Day

Feb 23, 2016

Download

Documents

idalia lilly

Digital Video & Media to Enhance Literacy Dennis Barry’s WoW Project ED 5670 – Literacy & Technology. Back in the Day. The days of wheeling this monstrosity from classroom to classroom are over Digital technology has created opportunities in classrooms that were once thought impossible. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Back in the Day

Digital Video & Media to Enhance LiteracyDennis Barry’s WoW Project

ED 5670 – Literacy & Technology

Page 2: Back in the Day

Back in the Day• The days of wheeling

this monstrosity from classroom to classroom are over

• Digital technology has created opportunities in classrooms that were once thought impossible

Page 3: Back in the Day

The New Digital Frontier

Page 4: Back in the Day

Why Digital Video?•Get students energized and engaged in hands-on learning experiences•The perfect medium for students who are auditory or visual learners•Taps into emotions which stimulate and enthrall students

Page 5: Back in the Day

Effectively Using Video•Research shows using digital video as an enhancement to a lesson is the most effective method

•Specific learning objectives should be determined, an instructional sequence should be developed and reinforcement activities planned

Page 6: Back in the Day
Page 7: Back in the Day

Back in the Day• Huge component

systems to complete even the most simple editing tasks

• Completely impractical in a classroom setting

• Expensive $$$

Page 8: Back in the Day

Not Just Watching… Creating!Improve the School-to-Home

Connection

• A third-grade teacher at Village School in Pacific Palisades, California, recorded his students explaining to their parents how to play a math game. Now their parents can play the same game at home. A music teacher at the school captures snippets of students to include in a video he sends to parents in lieu of a printed newsletter.

Produce PSAs, Skits, and more…• The broadcasting crew at

Benefield Elementary School in Lawrenceville, Georgia, records public-service announcements for the school’s live morning show. Sometimes they perform short skits that focus on vocabulary, wordplay, and idioms, says technology teacher Karen Hartung.

Page 9: Back in the Day

Not Just Watching… Creating!

Create Slide Shows• Mary Williams’s chemistry

students at St. Mary’s High School in Colorado Springs, Colorado, use Animoto (www.animoto.com), a free site that produces video pieces from phones, video clips, and music, to make 90-second (or longer) slide shows about the elements in the periodic table.

Record Students• Becky Goerend, a sixth-grade

teacher at Earlham Elementary in Iowa, records student responses to their independent-reading assignments. “In the past they would write their thoughts in a notebook. Now they can share them verbally,” says Goerend. “It’s a simple thing, but technology motivates. I have a closet in my classroom that I use as the recording booth.”

Page 10: Back in the Day

Creating Digital Media Encourages:

• communication and collaboration

• Research and information fluency

• Critical thinking, problem-solving & decision-making

• Technology operations & concepts

Page 11: Back in the Day
Page 12: Back in the Day

ResourcesTechlearning.com

Technology to Enhance Literacy & Learning: Preparing a Digital Generation

the Use of Digital Video and Media to Enhance Learning

University of Texas at Austin - the College of Education: Digital Media

Kathy Schrock Guide for Educators