My currently favorite tool to use for bringing video into the classroom is the Everyone Can Create: Video Apple Book from Apple Education (2018). At first, the things I like about it is that it isn’t just a list of projects or tools. It starts with the assumption that the teacher and learner have not used any of the tools and are new to video. The author used to teach video in school so there is a good deal of pedagogy behind it. It starts with lessons on using Clips and getting good shots while telling a story. Like I said, it’s not just about video. Each project uses the skills learned and then builds on previous projects. There is a teacher guide with rubrics and suggestions for use in other disciplines. I have been using it in my classes for two years now. It is easy for my beginning students as well as my advanced students to create good videos that demonstrate what they know in their own way.
Applying the rubric from Learning In Hand (2010), the book makes use of two free video applications, Clips and iMovie. Through all of this, everything is in the 3 to 4 categories depending on how the teacher applies it. The flexibility and content integration are very open. Our learners have been using this guide to make all kinds of videos to reflect on their learning, explain something new they learned, or to do a final presentation of a project. They have even been doing fun projects on their own using the same techniques. References Apple. (2018, October 1). Everyone can create video [Apple book]. Retrieved from Apple.com Vincent, T. (2010, October 26). Evaluation rubric for educational apps [blog]. Retrieved from https://learninginhand.com/blog/evaluation-rubric-for-educational-apps.html
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |