streamtome icon
Conferencing, Distance Ed, iPad, Mobile, Presentation, Share, TLT

App of the Week: StreamToMe

Use StreamToMe on your iPhone, iPod Touch or iPad to play *video*, *music* and *photo* files streamed over WiFi or 3G from your Mac or Windows PC. No prior conversion or syncing required (huge number of formats supported without conversion) just tap the file and it plays. Using TV out cables (iPhone4 or newer) or an Apple TV (with iPhone3Gs or newer), StreamToMe can play through your TV, turning your iPhone/iPod/iPad plus your Mac/PC into a home media center for all your files.

Price: $2.99

Platform: iPad and iPhone

More infohttp://itunes.apple.com/us/app/streamtome/id325327899?mt=8

Voicethread Commenting Features
Collaboration, instructional technology, TLT, Web 2.0

New VoiceThread Commenting Features

If you haven’t explored VoiceThread since last semester, you will be pleased to learn about the tool’s three new commenting features.  Direct replies and threaded conversations make interaction more interactive and dynamic, while private replies allow participants to engage one another more discreetly.

Direct Replies

Owners and editors of VoiceThreads are able to insert comments directly after someone else’s comment on a slide.  For example, students can reply directly to the feedback left by their classmates or questions asked by their instructor.  To do this, click on the direct reply icon inside a person’s comment window (it looks like an arrow).  Your reply will display directly beneath the original comment, but bumped in slightly.
Voicethread Direct Reply

Threaded Discussions

The threaded discussions feature makes VoiceThread more similar to an online discussion board, with comments branching off an original comment.  This helps to keep robust back-and-forth conversations more organized.

Voicethread Threaded Comment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To use this feature, you must enable it in Playback Settings.

Voicethread Playback Settings

Voicethread Enable Threaded Commenting

Threaded comments are represented by a round identity image (as opposed to the usual square shape).  To start a new threaded conversation, click on the threaded comment button inside a person’s comment window.

Voicethread Create a New Thread

Threaded discussions would be particularly useful if you’d like to encourage multiple students to engage one another about a VoiceThread’s content.  In contrast, a direct reply is a dialog between two people (though the interaction can be seen by anyone who has access to the VoiceThread).  This would be best for asking a single question or offering praise.

Private Replies

The private reply feature allows you to start a private, two-way conversation with someone who has commented on a VoiceThread.  Private comments are represented by a round identity image with a padlock icon.  To start a new private conversation or add to an existing one, click on the private reply button inside a person’s comment window.

Voicethread Private Reply

The private reply option could be especially useful if an instructor would like to include an assessment in a VoiceThread.  For example, an instructor could leave a comment asking the students to reply to a question.  To prevent the students from seeing one another’s responses, the instructor could request students use the private reply option.  That would permit only the instructor to see the students’ comments and would allow him/her to respond directly to each student.

Let us know what you think about these new commenting features.  We’d love to hear your ideas!

#tltcon It's Going to Be Epic!
Events, Faculty Showcase, Faculty Technology Institute, TLT, TLTCon

#TLTCon Featured Session: Casting Your Web

Are you interested in learning about web building tools?
Do you want to learn how to create a custom website for your course?
If so, you’re going to LOVE this session!

Casting Your Web: Building a custom website for your course (for free!)

Paul Colling head shotPresenter:  Paul Collins

Session Date:  March 9th

Session Time:  1:30- 3:00 pm

Sitting down to build a website can seem an intimidating and daunting proposal. But, as technology advances make it easier and easier (not to mention cheaper) to have a web presence, it is worth exploring some of the tools that have become available to use in our classes. A number of pretty good tools have made it possible to build websites to help to support our teaching. Weebly and Wix are two of these. I have used both services to support both my classes and my professional practice. I will briefly present the websites that I have created, and discuss how each has been useful to my work both within the College and outside of it. I will then go ‘under the hood’ to show the customization tools at work.

In the second part of the workshop, participants will explore the interface of each of these services, and experiment with some of the tools that are available to the user. I will then give a tutorial in which participants will be able to build webpages that can be published on the web by the end of the session!

In order to ‘play along’ in the web-building part of the workshop, participants will need a laptop (as opposed to a mobile device), as the editing engines do not yet work on mobile platforms. The demonstration portion of the workshop will work equally well on laptop and mobile.

REGISTER TODAY FOR #TLTCON* 

 

*Teaching, Learning, and Technology Conference brought to you by TLT and the FTI

TLT

Guest Post: Evernote

Our guest blogger this week is Dr. Mike Maher from the Department of French-Francophone-Italian Studies.  In this post, Dr. Maher shares his experiences using Evernote, a tool he was introduced to at the Faculty Technology Institute which he attended in 2014.

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Evernote is software that touts itself as, “the workplace for your life’s work.” It is a multi-functional platform to write, discuss, collect, and present. It synchronizes across all of your devices. Evernote is aesthetically pleasing with its minimalist format and grey tones splashed with lime green. I use Evernote primarily on my PC.

Evernote simply provides the user a means to collect really anything found on the internet. Any website or on-line article, blog post, even electronic boarding passes can immediately be saved to a folder. Each folder is termed a Notebook, and each saved document is a Note.

Once you download the Web Clipper, you’re in business. You head to the Evernote website and it leads you through the entire installation process. The Web Clipper icon appears in your browser next to the search bar as a small modern elephant; you simply click the icon any time you’d like to save what you’re looking at. Downloading the Web Clipper on your iPad is bit more involved, but still possible. The way you save the Note is up to you: an entire article, simplified article, full page, bookmark, or a screen shot.

I have found Evernote to be especially useful in the initial phases of gathering research sources. Research has shifted away from dusting off manuscripts in the library to an almost exclusively digital medium. Evernote helps to organize a general collection of sources to be examined closer in subsequent phases of research. I especially like the ability to annotate your Web Clippings. I highlight and make notes on screenshots from bibliographies found in google books and texts from archive.org.

As for writing, Evernote would be a place to keep to-do-lists and other informal notes. Evernote facilitates formal writing by providing the writer a space to organize their research and ideas. As for discussion, the Work Chat feature seems easy enough. Evernote readily shares your Notebooks via email, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, and also provides a URL link to your Notes. I have not explored the presentation software within Evernote: it requires the Premium upgrade. If the rest of the software’s functionality and usability is any indication, the presentation software is sure to be smooth and straight forward.

Best Practices, Collaboration, discussion, Distance Ed, Events, Information Session, Innovative Instruction, instructional technology, Mobile, Pedagogy, social networking, TLT, Training Opportunities

TLT’s Distance Education Resources Blog

TLT has a new resource available exclusively for our faculty who teach, or are interested in, online instruction!

http://blogs.charleston.edu/dereadiness/

There are two paths to choose from depending on your role:

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Choose this path if you:

  • Have never taught online before
  • Have taught online at another institution, but not CofC
  • Plan to teach online at CofC in the future

Start learning more about teaching online at CofC!

New to Distance Education

Choose this path if you:

  • Have completed the DE Readiness Course
  • Are currently teaching online at CofC
  • Are looking for resources related to online teaching and support

Explore more about online learning and support!

Currently Teaching Online

Make sure that you follow #CougarsOLI on all social media outlets to stay up to date on information and research pertaining to Online Learning Initiatives at College of Charleston

#CougarsOLI Logo (2)

#tltcon It's Going to Be Epic!
TLT

#TLTCon Session Highlight: All About DE

Are you interested in online teaching?  Or maybe you’re wondering what others are doing in their online courses?

Then these are just some of the sessions for you!

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Lessons Learned: A Discussion of Successes and Trials in an Online Course

Workshop Panelists:

  • Silvia Rodreiguez-Sabater (HISP)
  • Mary Ann Hartshorn (TEDU)
  • Amy Ostrom (TLT)
  • Melissa Thomas (CSL)

This interactive panel discussion is designed to hear the experiences from multiple online instructors from College of Charleston as they designed and taught their courses for the first time. A portion of the discussion will be opened to the audience to ask questions and turn from a panel to a round table discussion on issues relating to Distance Education.

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Online Course Assessment

Workshop presenter:

  • Doug Ferguson (COMM), Faculty Coordinator for Distance Education

Faculty at the College of Charleston complete the DE Readiness course before they teach online, but how are the online courses that they develop assessed for quality after faculty complete their training? A quality rubric is presently required of all applicants for an online course development stipend. Developed by Amy Ostrom and Jannette Finch, the rubric is a self-assessing, formative measure intended to reinforce the best practices learned in the Readiness course. This session presents detail about the rubric and entertains questions from the audience regarding online course quality at the College of Charleston.

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If you are interested in these sessions be sure to register for TLTCon, March 8th-10th, 2016.

Come to one session or come to them all! Whatever works best for you and your schedule.

For more information, visit our Eventbrite Page or the TLTCon Page on our blog.

Sphere icon
iPad, Mobile, TLT

App of the Week: Sphere – 360º Photography

Sphere 360 is the closest one can come to teleportation. With Tour Wrist one can visit travel destinations one minute, hotels and restaurants the next, or even look inside new cars and homes.

Simply by moving your iPhone up, down, or in any other direction, the user gets a 360 degree view of what one’s chosen to view.

With powerful search and sort tools, Sphere 360 gives you the power to travel, remotely.

Price: Free

Platform: iPad and iPhone

More infohttp://itunes.apple.com/us/app/tourwrist/id335671384?mt=8

TLT

Which CofC survey tool should I use? Google forms or Qualtrics?

The College provides two survey tools for faculty at no cost; Google Forms and Qualtrics.

Google Forms is part of CofC’s Google Apps for Education that is available to all faculty, staff and students .  You can plan events, make a survey or poll, or collect other information in an easy, streamlined way with Google Forms. You can create a form from Google Drive or from an existing spreadsheet that can record the responses to your form.

For information on activating your CofC Google apps account visit http://blogs.charleston.edu/it/tag/google-apps/. And for instructions on how to create a survey using Google forms visit  https://goo.gl/p9rFVk

The Qualtrics Research Suite is a survey software available to all faculty, staff and students at the College of Charleston, to fulfill a variety of research needs. Qualtrics can be used to build surveys, distribute surveys, and analyze responses, all within the Qualtrics Research Suite.

For more information about Qualtrics, visit http://oiep.cofc.edu/qualtrics/

But which one of these tools would be best for you?  For a side by side comparison of features visit http://www.analyzo.com/product-comparisons/108/Google-Forms/277/Qualtrics/28 

Disregard the information about “Plan” since both of these are free to CofC Faculty and Staff .   Also disregard the information about “Help and Support” because you can contact your Instructional Technologist for questions about Google Forms and should contact Cara Dombroski  at CofC for questions about Qualtrics.

 

 

 

 

 

Example of voice thread where someone has used the doodle tool to punctuate a sentence.
Distance Ed, Innovative Instruction, TLT

Innovative Uses of the VoiceThread Commenting Feature

 STANDARD USE OF VOICETHREAD

Most people use VoiceThread to deliver online lectures or to have students deliver project presentations. Very few use the commenting tool for more than just recording an audio or video voiceover. The Commenting tool however, can be used for so much more. I just attended an online session, delivered by George Haines of VoiceThread, on how to use VoiceThread for games and learned several new ways to use it.

VoiceThread (VT) for Games

Prisoner’s Dilemma

The Prisoner’s Dilemma is a game where a pair of students must decide whether to cooperate or defect and points are assigned based on what they choose. It’s based on two prisoners are taken in together to be questioned by the police.  They decide before hand that they will not turn on one another so that if neither one tells they will both get off scott free.  They are told by the police that if they cooperate they will get a lighter sentence AND that the other partner is going to rat them out.  Points are assigned as follows:

  • Both cooperate: each student gets 3 points
  • One defects (rats) and one cooperates: rat gets 5 points, cooperate gets 0
  • Both defect: each student gets 1 point
  • The team member with the most points wins the team BUT your team is also playing against the other pairs in the class
  1. A pair of students are assigned one VT. They must decide, in secret, whether to cooperate or defect. Comment Moderation is turned on so the students don’t see what the other is doing.
  2. There are several rounds as long as you have an odd number of games.
  3. On the last slide they should analyze their game and how it relates to the topic.

Ideas for Use:
Exercise Science – Do you use doping to increase an athlete’s performance?
Anything that has to do with ethics.
Current Events normally can be adapted to this type of game.
Climate Change – One is China, one is the USA – Do you spend the money to curb emissions to clean up the environment?  If you do and the other doesn’t then they get clean air without spending the money.

The Ultimatum Game

A Modification of prisoner’s dilemma.  Based on how people perceive themselves in the hierarchy or pecking order.  There are two students who have to decide how to split $10.  Student A decides how to split the money.  Student B decides if they will accept or reject the split.

  • If B accepts, each get that dollar amount
  • If B rejects they don’t get any money
  • Score for the individual in the team and for the class
  1. A pair of students are assigned one VT. Comment Moderation is turned on so the students don’t see what the other is doing.
  2. Student A must decide how to split $10 using the Text commenting tool.
  3. Student B must then accept or reject the split using the Text commenting tool.
  4. There are several rounds (maybe 10).
  5. Halfway through the total number of rounds. There should be a slide where the students discuss how they are doing and ways to get a higher score. Also reflect on how they are doing as a group
  6. Play the second half of the rounds but switch Student A and B, where B now decides how to split and A accepts/rejects..
  7. On the last slide they should analyze their individual game play, what they learned about themselves and how it relates to the topic.

Ideas for Use:
Anything where there are Haves and Have nots
Political Science: how different countries relate to each other.
Global Health: How do we spend money to stop a pandemic, on our people or on the people where the pandemic has started.

Doodle Games

These are games that use the Doodle Tool that is available in video and audio comments.

grid in spanish of numbersTrace a path:  Tracing a path through a grid while they explain why they are choosing those things.
Example – Trace a line through all the even numbers and  pronounce them as you go though them.

Draw on a Map Add a blank map and have students identify specific areas of the map or trace a journey on the map.

Venn Diagram comparing Cats and Dogs

 

Draw a diagram: Free draw a diagram that demonstrates concept organization.  Students will draw a diagram or will add items to a diagram while talking through why they are using that diagram or why they are putting items in specific areas.  Faculty will just upload a blank PowerPoint slide.


In your games you can also create a leaderboard for first responders if you want because VT will show you show responded in the date/time order.


VoiceThread for Questions

Reading Quiz

Place quotes or questions from the reading that will be used to prompt discussion in the face to face class. The night before, students must respond to those questions on their own. The professor then looks at those before class and incorporates them into the discussion.

  1. Create a PowerPoint with the images and/or questions (make the questions thought provoking) and upload that into VoiceThread. Turn on Comment Moderation so the students cannot see what others have said.
  2. Students go in and answer using the commenting feature however they want.
  3. Faculty then looks at/listens to the comments.
  4. In an online class: once everyone has responded professor may want to accept all those comments so others can then see what their classmates said. Face-to-Face you don’t need to do this because you will be discussing it in class.

Diagram or Grammar Questions

The professor uploads a diagram, model, image, or text question to VT. The students then use the audio/video commenting feature AND the doodle tool to mark up the image.

  1. _130__VoiceThread_-_HomeCreate a PowerPoint with the images and/or text and upload that into VoiceThread. Turn on Comment Moderation so the students cannot see what others have said.
  2. Students go in and answer using the audio or video commenting feature only and the doodle tool (colored pencils at the bottom of the VT recording screen) to mark up the image.
  3. Faculty then looks at/listens to the comments.
  4. You don’t need to accept the moderated comments because other students will not need to see what their classmates answered.

Great for geography, exercise science, health,

Helpful Links

 

Best Practices, discussion, TLT

Tips For More Effective Online Discussions

There are many ways in which faculty can extend the classroom conversation online; OAKS Discussion board, VoiceThread, and blogs to name a few.  However, there is an art to getting students to actually think critically and discuss thoughtfully in an online environment.   The document below outlines a few tips to help you get more out of your students in an online discussion.

Download a printable PDF

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