Windows into the classroom

Another excellent Edublogs.org blog

Creative Use of Interactive Whiteboards (IWBs)

Welcome to the new year.  It is hard to believe it is 2010.  It seems like only yesterday we were worried about the milennium bug. It will be interesting to see what the world of technology has to offer us this year!

Interactive Whiteboards

IWBs are now becoming common place in many classrooms.  With new Web 2.0 applications coming out everyday we can be more creative with what we do with these IWBs rather than using them as expensive TVs and whiteboards!

The attached PowerPoint demonstrates some ways teachers could use their IWB to teach literacy that is engaging and powerful.  There are also some suggestions of websites and software that support literacy programs, giving students alternative ways of learning to understand the often difficult rules and forms of our English language.

Wordle

AudacityIntro

Hints for Using KerPoof

PPT IWBs

MILLIONAIRE MASTER is one example of the Interactive Games on John Short’s site http://www.myinteractiveclassroom.com/.  Millionaire Master is free as are some of the other games!

If you are part of the Tasmanian Education Department check out our Interactive Whiteboard SharePoint site for more ideas K-10
http://ecentre.education.tas.gov.au/sites/ictlearning/IWB/default.aspx

Remember that most of these activities can also be used on a single PC!

Digital Narratives for Digital Natives

Digital storytelling gives us the opportunity to bridge the divide between digital immigrants (teachers) and digital natives (students). As the report on Mapping Multiliteracies from the South Australian University and Education Department tell us; In our world of multiliteracies students must not only learn to read, write, listen and speak, they are also expected to express their ideas through a range of media including design, layout, colour, graphics and animation as they decipher, code break and achieve meaning.

 

This workshop will consider a small selection of freely available tools that effectively engage and motivate students. As teachers, we bring a wealth of knowledge and expertise concerning writing and through the use of these tools that belong to the technological world of our students we may be able to build connections that cross between the divide of the digital immigrant and the digital native.

 

Technology provides us with these tools (in addition to pen and paper) to address basic aspects of writing such as organising, planning, structuring and communicating a message effectively to a specific audience.  These tools provide opportunities to capture the innovative ideas of students who are reticent to write in the traditional manner. They allow our students to express themselves within a medium they feel confident and comfortable using, exposing previously hidden thoughts and feelings.

 

Come along and see how these tools can enhance your student’s storytelling abilities, creating messages that may draw our worlds together.

 

Twitter: jules4499

Any questions email me at: julie.fielding@education.tas.gov.au

 PowerPoint presentation –

aate-alea-national-conference

Additional activities for Wordle – Thirty-Eight Interesting Ways to Use Wordle in the Classroom

 

Book Trailers

 

Book trailers are becoming increasing popular within the world of education… but what is a book trailer? 

 

If you recall the many movie trailers you have seen, advertising the latest movie releases, you will begin to grasp an understanding of what a book trailer might be.  It is a video advertisement for a book, an advertisement that encourages you to read the book.

 

For students to create an effective and informative book trailer they need to be aware of some ‘tricks’ of design and content.  They need to convey a sense of what the book is about without giving too much of the story away.  The design of the book trailer should motivate observers to buy or borrow the book and read it.

 

The creation of a book trailer is not as simple as it first appears…Unlike movies where the trailer shows us the characters, a book trailer shares part of the essence of the story, enticing you to want to read the book – without defining what the characters maybe like.  Many of us like to ‘picture’ for ourselves what the characters and setting maybe like.  It is one of the joys of reading a book – visualising the setting and characters within our own imagination!  

 

Some students find visualisation difficult and book trailers may assist their skills in this area because it gives the book a context and some visual clues.  Visualisation increases reading proficiency and has positive consequences for learning and metacognition.

Most book trailers run from one to three minutes. They can be as simple as a narrator reading a passage from the book or as complex as an elaborate mini-movie.  Book trailers can be acted out, full production trailers, flash videos, animation or simple still photos set to music with text conveying the story.

 

Thank you to Pam Powell, our English-literacy Project Officer, who has provided a framework for developing book trailers and found resources that help us understand what the end product might look like!

 

How are book trailers organised?

 

These notes unpack the structures and features that students need to understand before they attempt to make their own book trailers.  They are intended as background information for teachers who plan interactive ways of presenting the concepts to their classes as part of their teaching program.

 

Book trailers are argument texts: teachers might explore aspects of persuasive writing (sometimes known as expositions or expository writing) before beginning a unit about creating book trailers.

 

The purpose is

 

  • to entertain, inform and persuade
  • to encourage others to read the book.

After viewing of a number of different book trailers, students discuss some of the ways in which they might achieve their purposes for making a particular book trailer.

 

The audience might be

 

  • students within the same class
  • other students from the same grade or from another grade according to the intended age group for the book
  • a combined audience of students and parents at a special gathering arranged to view the book trailers
  • the general public (if trailers are submitted to one of the blogs, wikis and websites that accept contributions from students.)

 

Text structure

 

  • will vary according to availability of

o        software e.g. PowerPoint, Photostory 3, Movie Maker, ArtRage, Paint, PhotoShop, Stop Motion Animation, Kahootz

o        equipment e.g. digital and video cameras, MP3 players

o        time that students have to complete their trailer.

 

Book trailers are created using

 

  • images.  Most trailers use a mixture of images including
    • still photographs
    • scenes shot on video
    • animation
    • drawings.

 

  • sound
    • musical background
    • voice overs
    • conversation between characters
    • sound effects
    • silence.  (Silence can be used in film to create dramatic effects.)

 

  • editing

Editing is the process of putting the individual shots together to tell a story.  Students choose visual images, print and sound to create a cohesive text.

Methods of changing from one scene to the next vary according to the chosen software.  They include

  •  
    • jump cuts
    • fade outs
    • dissolves
    • impressions of pages turning or spiralling

The pace of the film is determined during the editing process.

 

The visual image maker: a tool for analysing and creating visual texts is available from the eCentre (only available to Tasmanian government and Catholic schools) at http://resources.education.tas.gov.au/item/edres/2dcd007b-8d0b-d6bd-6614-4c89313de07f/1/ViewIMS.jsp.  It provides students with an interactive way of learning about visual language.  (Some schools have found the tool very useful as an introduction to the making of digital stories.)

 

In addition the following structural elements should be presented in book trailers, though the ways in which they are demonstrated will vary according to the visual and verbal elements chosen by students.

 

  • Statement of position

Encourage students to form a clear and forceful statement giving their opinion or point of view about the book.  While this might not be directly stated in the trailer it should underpin all of the information presented in the trailer.

 

  • Development of an argument
    • In order to persuade their audience, students use arguments and assertions to reinforce and emphasise their statement of position. 
    • Each point put forward should be supported by evidence and / or examples that are carefully selected to add weight to the argument.
    • The ordering of points is a crucial factor in influencing the audience.  Most arguments start with the strongest points and then link to the weaker ideas.

 

  • Summary of position
    • occurs at the end of the trailer.
    • This might take the form of an evaluation of the book, a reiteration of the position or a call for action e.g. a last appeal for the audience to read the book.

 

 

Language features

 

Visual language: representation

Representation refers to the meaning that the viewer makes from the images presented within the frame of the picture.

 

  • signs and symbols. 
    • We acknowledge the use of symbols in our everyday lives by interpreting the signs we see around us. 

              J   L  N  U  Y  € 

o        Similar conventions are used to represent feelings and give status to individuals e.g. the symbol of a lion is often used on royal coats of arms to represent power and authority.

o        Objects often have symbolic meanings that are recognised by the audience e.g. a Mercedes Benz car has a symbolic meaning of wealth and luxury.

 

  • Body language

is consciously used to convey personality, feelings and relationships with others.  Elements include

o        gesture and movement

o        distance

o        posture

o        orientation – the way in which a person’s body is aligned in relation to another person e.g.  Are they leaning towards or away from the person next to them?

o        touch e.g. Who touches whom?  In what ways?  In which situations?

o        facial expression

o        eye contact.

 

  • Physical appearance

includes such things as

o        clothing

o        hair style and colour

o        jewellery

o        makeup

o        body style e.g. height, weight, build.

 

Visual language: presentation  

 

Presentation refers to the way in which the visual image is constructed.  It includes aspects such as

 

  • Camera angles
    • High angle – the camera is positioned above the subject.  It appears that the you are looking down on someone making them look weak and insignificant.
    • Eye level –It appears as if you are on the same level as the person of object.  It seems as if you are sharing the point of view with a character
    • Low angle - the camera is positioned below the subject.  It makes you look up to the person and they appear to be powerful.

 

  • Camera shots

Photographs and drawings have frames.  The frame decides how much information you see and helps you make meaning from it.

o        A long shot shows the whole person and some background.  It is used to establish the setting.

o        A medium shot shows a person from the waist up.  It is used to show people’s actions and gestures.

o        A close up shows a person’s head and shoulders or an object in detail. It is used to show emotions and to highlight important details.

 

  • Special effects

Photographs and drawings can be manipulated to create particular impressions e.g. body shapes can be adjusted to make people appear thinner or fatter.  Air brushing can be used to remove wrinkles making people look younger.

 

  • Lighting and colour
    • Light patterns in photographs or films suggest different moods or create a focus on a particular part of the picture.
    • Colours can be bright and vibrant or soft and muted.  The colours reflect the mood and atmosphere of the scene.
    • Some colours have symbolic meaning e.g. in Australia red suggests danger and white usually means purity. 

Reference: Rod Quinn, Barrie McMahon and Robyn Quinn, 1997. Picture this: reading visual language. Curriculum Corporation.

 

Verbal language features

 

This refers to the ways in which spoken and written language is used in the trailers.

 

Some book trailers might not use print at all: they rely on visual and spoken language to convey their messages.  Nevertheless, the language is constructed to persuade the audience to read the book.

 

  • Awareness of the audience
    • Book trailers usually target a specific audience so that the images and words used, together with the tone and atmosphere created, will appeal directly to that audience.
    • The tone might be personal and emotive because it is hoped that the audience will empathise with the situation and / or characters presented in the trailer.

 

  • Linking words and conjunctions
    • Conjunctions create cohesion and express cause and effect e.g. because, therefore, so …
    • They are used to link ideas, contrast concepts, sequence thoughts and connect cause and effect.
    • Reasons for actions or choices are shown through the use of linking words e.g. similarly, because

 

  • Emotive words
    • attempt to arouse people’s feelings rather than being neutral or creating objective descriptions.
    • suggest feelings beyond the actual meaning of the word e.g. armchair suggests comfort whereas chair does not have a particular connotation. 
    • https://woc.uc.pt/fluc/getFile.do?tipo=2&id=2259 has lists of the most common words used in advertising and might be used as the beginning of a discussion of emotive words

  • Impersonal language
    • First person pronouns such as I and we are not generally used.
    • Personal opinions are disguised as facts e.g. This is surely a catastrophe that endangers civilisation as we know it.
    • The passive voice is frequently used so that the person making the claim is not identified and so that the tone creates authority and strength. e.g. It is certain that … 

 

  • Nominalisation
    • is the process of changing actions (verbs) into things (nouns) e.g.

 

Action

Thing

I am worried …

Concern was expressed …

The bomb might explode …

The possible detonation …

Everyone will die …

Wide spread mortality …

 

  •  
    • This is often used to structure and add authority to persuasive texts.

 

  • Degrees of certainty
    • Book trailers are able to overstate the case by using authoritative words such as always, never before,
    • Avoid vague reasoning and make convincing statements that will encourage the audience to read the book.

 

  • Present tense
    • Generally timeless present tense is used, although this might change if referring to events in the past or those that might occur in the future.

 

References: 

Beverly Derewianka (1995). Exploring how texts work. Primary English Teaching Association.

First Steps: writing resource book 2nd Edition (2005). Rigby Heinemann

Targeting text upper primary: Recount, procedure and exposition (1998). Blake Education

 

 

ã ã ã

 

 

View some book trailers

A Google search will find hundreds of book trailers.  Make sure that you preview them first: some are decidedly unsuitable for student viewing.  

 

A search of book trailers for kids will locate some interesting clips and information about how to make a book trailer.  (See also the English-literacy sharepoint at http://ecentre.education.tas.gov.au/sites/English-literacy/default.aspx.)

This code classifies the book trailers listed below:

Suitable for primary school students

Suitable for middle schools students

Suitable for high school students

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_kj5ZLrIJw

The Recess Queen by Alexis O’Neill illustrated by Laura Huliska-Beth, published by Scholastic Press.  This kind of trailer is easy to make using software such as Photostory 3. It is simply a collection of illustrations from the book set to music. 

http://www.houghtonmifflinbooks.com/authors/wiesner/books/books_flotsam.shtml

Flotsam by David Wiesner, published by Clarion books in 2006.  A very simple, but effective trailer that manipulates pictures from the book combined with voice overs and music.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsaSd1GjWeQ

How to save your tail by Mary Hanson, published by Random House.  The voice over is a conversation between one of the characters and a narrator.  The trailer includes a montage of illustrations, photos and black and white line drawings.  A simple style for students to use as a model.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRQdanIIt80

Max Quigley: technically not a bully by James Roy, published by Houghton Mifflin in 2009.  This is a very simple trailer that makes a good model for students.  While the trailer is suitable for primary students, the book might raise issues that are more appropriate for secondary students.  Because this book is a new one James Roy hasn’t yet classified in on his website.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWDP-CfeYYY&feature=related

Edsel Grizzler: voyage to Verdada by James Roy, published by Penguin in 2009.  Another simple trailer for students to use as a model.  This is the first book in a new fantasy trilogy about the adventures of Edsel Grizzler in a parallel world where there are no rules and no parents.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4bVZQvy0vN8

Nineteen minutes by Jodi Picoult, published by Atria Books in 2007. The effectiveness of the visual images at the beginning, the use of the author’s voice over and the detailed plot summary could be provoke some interesting discussion from students, especially those who have read this popular novel.  Why does the trailer maker choose to present the trailer in this way?

http://www.trailerspy.com/trailer/1220/Dave-Barrys-Science-Fair-Book-Trailer

Science Fair: a story of mystery, danger, international suspense and a very nervous frog by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson, published by Disney Editions in 2008.  The very obvious camera techniques employed in the trailer make it useful for students to unpack visual language features.

http://evilgeniusbooks.blogspot.com/2008/06/genius-squad-book-trailer-debut.html

Genius squad by Catherine Jinks, published by Allen & Unwin in 2008.  This is the sequel to Catherine Jinks’ earlier novel called Evil genius.  The trailer is very similar to a conventional trailer of an action movie. 

http://www.bookshorts.com/watch_irobot.htm

i-ROBOT Poetry by Jason Christie, published by EDGE in 2007.  A trailer that animates black and white drawings with a soundtrack.  At 3.30 minutes it’s long and needs a lot of intertextuality to fully comprehend.  It might still be worth showing because some students might be inspired by the simple yet very effective techniques used.

i-ROBOT Poetry is a social commentary based around robots who wish to find their own identities.  http://www.edgewebsite.com/books/irobotpoetry/ir-catalog.html contains a short clip on the making of the book trailer and an interview with the author and film maker.  http://robots.net/article/2246.html is a review of the book that includes some of the poems.  This could become an interesting and unusual unit for students studying at standard 5.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Something new to explore!

Welcome back to Term 1 of our new school year.

 

There are always new tools appearing on the internet for us to use with our students.  I have selected a few that you might like to explore with your students. Let me know what you think of them!

 

Interactive Posters

http://www.glogster.com/edu/

Glogster allows you to include sound, voice, images and hyperlinks into your posters. This site allows students to create posters in an innovative and dynamic way, sharing purposeful messages with others in the online world.

 

Optical Illusions

http://www.michaelbach.de/ot/mot_snakeAdLib/index.html

These examples of optical illusions provide students with the opportunity to explore colour, shape, line and design and how they work together to create moving pictures.

 

I Spy games

http://www.scholastic.com/ispy/play/

The I Spy books as an interactive.  It includes sound and text highlighting to help students read the clues.

 

Delicious – online bookmarking –

http://delicious.com  

Not such a new tool but very useful.  Delicious allows you to access your links anytime, anyplace and you can also share your list of links with others!

 

Bookmarking shortcut

If you want to add a link to your toolbar so that you can save found web pages easily…click on Settings at the top right hand corner of your Delicious page.  On the Settings page click on Save a new bookmark – which is also in the top right hand corner. When you are on the Save a new bookmark page click on the Bookmarking Tools link and follow the instructions for Internet Explorer.

 

SuperClubsPLUS Australia

 

Recently schools have been registering students to join SuperClubsPLUS Australia.  This online environment is a safe way for students to create their own web pages, email students and teachers in other schools and join interests groups online.  What makes this environment safe is its live mediators. All emails are answered and students can even ring the emergency bell when something worrying crops up.  This is particularly comforting for young students who want to be part of the world of social networking in times where cyberbullying is prevalent. There are many other programs that are similar on the web but these are often mediated by computers and are not as effective or personal as SuperClubsPLUS. This ‘space’ caters for students between the ages of six and twelve. For older students there is GoldStar Café, so when the grade six students finish primary school at the end of next year they have a ‘space’ to move into.

Things students can do in SuperClubsPLUS Australia:

  • Students can create surveys for their online friends to complete. 
  • There is a safe blog page to contribute to.
  • You can see who is online and have a look at their web page.
  • Other students can vote on each others page design. 
  • The best site is selected each month so students are encouraged to be creative as well as thinking about their design and how to present information to an audience.
  • Students can use the forum tool to have a discussion around particular topics and they also have access to the online Britannica encyclopaedia to help with research.
  • Students can join particular clubs that suit their personal interests and earn badges when they reach a certain number of hits on their home page. 
  • Teachers can give out special awards to students when they have done something particularly good or helpful.
  • It fits well with our new ICT Curriculum Framework, developing student online skills in communicating, web design, copyright and research.

Normally it costs students $15 a year to join.  At the moment it is free for Tasmanian schools to join for one year.  Sign your students up today ready for next year!

Martyn Wild and Suzanne Barr came over from Melbourne and took a group of teachers through the site earlier this term so we already have some schools actively using the site.

The schools that have joined so far are:

Blackmans Bay primary
Brighton Primary
Centre For Extended Learning Opportunities
Cambridge Primary
Dodges Ferry Primary
Goodwood Primary
Goulburn Street Primary
Herdsmans Cove Primary
Kingston Primary
Moonah Primary
Newtown Primary
Sandy bay Infant
Oatlands District School
Taroona Primary
Snug Primary

Take a tour and find out what it is all about!

http://www.superclubsplus.com.au/

 

What is Podcasting?

Many schools are using Podcasting as a tool to communicate.  Podcasting allows you to record your own voice and place it on a website so that others may listen to what you have to say!

Edublogs lets you easily add a podcast to your blog site.  As Edublogs can be passworded it is a safe environment for teachers and students to communicate with each other.

Listen to this Podcast that I recorded, reading a definition of what podcasting is!

Podcasting

Here are some notes that might help you get started with podcasting!

Podcasting: Getting started

Podcasting with a primary classroom.

Last week I spent the morning with five Illawarra Primary School students and their teacher setting up an edublog.  They needed a blog to host the podcasts they had made in Italian for their partner class in Italy.  Blogs and podcasts are very useful for classrooms working in LOTE as it allows students to practice their pronunciation and share their recordings with others on the other side of the world!

Here are Kiara, Davis, Georgina, Luke and Callum uploading their podcasts into their blog.

Working hard!

Have a listen to their podcasts in Italian!
http://illawarra.edublogs.org/

 

Interactivity Fun

Interactive whiteboards are appearing everywhere now and there are many resources available on the web to support their interactivity. Include ‘interactive’ in your search term in Google and see what comes up! These activities can be for any computer, not just on an interactive whiteboard!
Here are a few of the interactive sites that I have found lately for some classes I have been working with.

Magnet interactive – around grade 1 – 4
Magnets

Building bridges to withstand earthquakes – this great for grade 3 and up
New Bay Bridge

Interactive body from the BBC – for Secondary students
Interactive Body

Australian animals – video and information about animals – Primary. There are a couple of videos that do not work but most of them do.  Media Player will let you watch them in full screen mode.
Australia Zoo

And some musical fun! – Primary
Sphinx Kids

Webcams
And don’t forget webcams. There are many webcams on cities around the world that are great for checking out what is happening in the part of the world right now or in the past few hours:

Here is Times Square in New York
Times Square Web Cam

And a local one situated at Rose Bay High school that shows the Tasman Bridge traffic:
Rose Bay Web Cam

 Just type webcam and the city of your choice into your search and see if the place you selected has one!

 

Just a general blurb!

Apologies for the long time between entries in the Blog!  The moving of an office can be a traumatic event.  The move has been coming a long time and being half packed for a couple a months can be inconvenient.  But here we are now in our new spaces and I finally have a clear head to write about what ICT has been happening our schools.

 

Kahootz 3

Kahootz 3 would be the most recent and exciting event in the last couple of months. Check out the website and have a look at the new version!

http://www.kahootz.com/kz/

 

It is far superior to its predecessor and allows students to create many more effects, add 4 different tracks of sound including their own music and voice.  It provides excellent opportunities for students to design and create worlds where they can write text, manipulate objects to represent something else and problem solve many different types of dilemmas.

 

A number of teachers attended the two workshops ran by Peter Maggs from the Australian Children’s’ Television Foundation (ACTF) here in Hobart.  Three teachers brought some of their students along and they thoroughly enjoyed the new Kahootz experience along with the novelty of working along side their teachers!

 

TinkerPlots and InspireData

Another workshop we ran last term was TinkerPlots and InspireData.  I have briefly mentioned these programs in a previous blog.  They are excellent programs for teaching students how to collect data and interpret the collected samples.  Both have 30 day free trial versions that you can look at before you buy.  They would be suitable for Primary and Lower Secondary classes.

Inspire Data – (new product from Inspiration – a visual way to explore and understand data)

http://www.inspiration.com/freetrial/index.cfm  

 

Tinkerplots – is specifically designed to get students in grades 4–8 excited about what they can learn from data. Analyze data by creating colourful visual representations, helping students make sense out of real data and recognize patterns as they unfold. http://www.keypress.com/x17679.xml

 

Interactive whiteboards are becoming very popular and many schools are having at least one installed.   Check out Ros Cocker’s Blog about them from last year:

http://popis.edublogs.org/2007/10/16/technologies-that-can-enable-pedagogical-change/

 

For those teachers reading this in our Tasmanian Education Department, we also have a great collection of resources for Interactive Whiteboards on a workspace in the eCentre.  Check it out for some suggestions of what you can do with your board:

http://ecentre.education.tas.gov.au/sites/ictlearning/IWB/default.aspx

 

Most of the work I have been doing in schools lately is around the SharePoint Workspaces -School Templates.  Many schools are now setting up class pages so that students who have computer access at home can upload their work in a secure environment.  Teachers can also pop items in for students anytime! Recently, at Princes Street, I worked with individual teachers, helping them create and customise their class page to suit their needs.  The student IT team also sat in on the professional learning so they could support teachers into the future.

 

In my last blog entry I wrote about video.  Since that time I have had some experience with a new digital video camera that downloads your filming in record time!  So rather than download in real time e.g 1 hour video takes 1 hour to download, it takes a fraction of the time.  I spent a whole day filming and it only took 10 minutes to download.  There are many cameras on the market now which could be useful in a school setting.  The editing still takes a lot of time!

 

Till next time…

Video and stop motion animation 

Many schools are creating videos and stop motion animations for statewide and national competitions.  There are many things to consider when working with students making movies. Digital video has the potential to expand a student’s capacity to think, learn, understand and communicate.  It allows students to combine moving images, text, sound, music, still images and dialogue into stories, documentaries and research projects for sharing.

Digital video offers students the opportunity to experience planning, filming, editing and publishing their own products.  Students also have the opportunity to experience the processes and skills involved in communicating, collaborating, negotiating and compromising.  It allows students to take responsibility for the whole process, from deciding on content to filming and editing, learning what it takes to function within a group and to build and maintain resilient and productive relationships. 

There are many opportunities out there for schools to be involved with digital video and national competitions. Waimea Heights has recently won the opportunity to participate in the Panasonic Kids Witness News. Last year, Brent Street, were our state winners and finalists in the national competition.  If you successfully apply to participate, Panasonic have a free training session with the students and their teacher at the beginning of the year and supply digital cameras to use for the duration of the project!  http://panasonic.com.au/kwn/   

Many schools also participate in the MyState Financial Student Film Festival every year, which is another opportunity for schools to showcase their students’ talents. http://mystate.com.au/community/film/  

There is also the Tournament of Minds, in which many schools enter groups of students.  Students have to use technology around a chosen theme…without any adult help or guidance!  Last year Blackmans Bay, Princes Street, Kingston Primary, Waimea Heights, Ogilvie High, Taroona High and Newtown High all did extremely well! http://portals.studentnet.edu.au/TOM/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabindex=8&tabid=27  

The Screen It competition is also popular with schools, where students can submit a game (using GameMaker), stop motion animation or a short video.  Lansdowne Crescent Primary School were finalists in this competition last year. http://www.acmi.net.au/screenit.htm  

There are a number of ways that schools can win equipment and at the end of last year Glen Huon won two DVD digital cameras for their school.  These cameras come with DVD software so that you can create DVDs that can be played on a home DVD player.  The software is very basic but great for introducing primary school students to the world of videoing!  The only downside is that the videos cannot be used in Windows Movie Maker but they can be used with more advanced software as mentioned further down in this blog. 

Please share with us if you have had any great experiences with student video and know of any great and worthwhile competitions! 

The Process 

Crucial to the success of digital movie making with students is providing them with the appropriate tools for editing and most importantly viewing of the final product. Here are some tips to help you with digital video making: 

Downloading digital video: To download video easily onto a computer you will need to have the following options available to you: 

  • Firewire cable

(if your laptop/desktop does not have a firewire connection you can purchase a firewire card)

  • USB 2 on both your computer (teacher laptops have USB 2) and the device you are using (older digital cameras do not have USB 2)

NB: Many schools have purchased teacher laptops to be used in classrooms and as a portable lab.  It is not recommended that you use your own personal laptop with students. 

If it is possible (e.g. you are filming just in your classroom) you might find it useful to have a long firewire cable so that you can video straight into MovieMaker or whatever other video editing program you are using.  This can be helpful when working with younger students as there is no download time…remembering that if your film is 30 minutes long it will take 30 minutes to download from the camera to the computer. 

Storing video

It is important to be aware how much storage space is needed to store video.  It should always be kept on a local machine (C drive of a desktop or D drive of a laptop) or a dedicated space on the school servers (this would need to be coordinated with the school technicians). Remember that 15 minutes of video  footage uses about 3 gigabytes. This means that you would need to select a computer that has the capacity and speed to store video easily.  Careful planning and management needs to be considered around the whole process of videoing to avoid unnecessary amounts of video being stored , e.g. planning the video/movie using story boards, limiting the amount of time students can video for, planning how students will access the video for editing and so on. 

Editing and creating a product for an audience 

All computers come with Movie Maker which allows you to edit your videos. The teacher laptops also come with the NTI CD and DVD Maker to save the final product onto a CD/DVD that will only play on a computer.  You can start with the Windows basic video editor, Movie Maker (help notes can be found on the Support tab of the eCentre).  Once students have become proficient with this software you might like to move onto more advanced video making software that your school could purchase. There are some suggestions about the software available below. 

NTI CD and DVD maker Gold 

This NTI CD and DVD maker Gold software will allow you to burn your finished movie (video) onto a CD or DVD using the data option. NB: It does not create DVDs that can be played on a DVD player. 

Advanced video editing and creating DVDs to play on DVD players – some suggestions: 

Pinnacle

http://www.pinnaclesys.com/PublicSite/as/Home/  

The website provides movies to view that will demonstrate the features of this software. 

ULead Video Studio

http://www.ulead.com/vs/

Download a trial version for 30 days and explore the features of ULead Video Studio.

The advantages of ULead Video Studio:

  • You can make the copyright notice at the beginning of the movie to come up automatically (like commercial DVDs)
  • You can convert PhotoStory3 for Windows and KidPix and individual photographs, stop motion animation files to make into a movie with ULead.

 Muvee

http://www.muvee.com

This is student friendly software for creating movies. It has good support and a 21 day trial version is available to download from the web. You may need to buy a plug-in style pack for Muvee if you want to keep actual video in sequence…the “keep it all” pack. 

Adobe Premiere

http://www.adobe.com/products/premiere/

This has a 30 free download trial.This product has very advanced features with quite a complicated interface.  Students would need to have had a great deal of experience with more simplified video editing software before using Adobe Premiere.  It would be an excellent next step for students who are interested in adding layers of sounds and effects to their video products. 

Stop Motion Animation Using Stop Motion Animator

Stop motion animation is a kind of cell animation using such resources as paper, plasticine or Lego, and a web cam.  The software, Stop Motion Animator (SMA) is an simple way to create a stop motion animation with students of all ages.

  • SMA is a free downloadable program.  Follow the download and install instructions at the site Claymation
  • In order to use this program you will need a web cam properly attached and installed to your computer
  • Here is a link to a ‘how to’ for Stop Motion Animation

There are other ways of doing stop motion animation and if you have some good ideas please share them! 

ICT for Free

ICT for free! 

Here is some information about the ‘freebies’ that are available for us on the web that we can use in our classrooms!  Check out some of the sites and free software suggested in this blog. They don’t cost anything but you will probably have to register to access most of them.  Just make sure you read the ‘fine print’ when registering to avoid getting too many update or information emails, unless of course you want to receive them.

There is a plethora of materials on the web and it can be quite overwhelming.  What to look at, where to start?  It is best to start with what your students need and then search from that point.

This list is not exhaustive but there is enough here to keep everyone entertained for awhile!

Some useful search engines are:

Live Windows Search http://www.live.com/

Study Search – a customised educational search engine for Australian Schools. http://www.studysearch.com.au/

Clusty – (previously known as Vivisimo) is a clustering search engine.  For example if you type in ‘cats’ it will cluster the information into categories such as breeder listings, Wild, Photos, Kittens, musical etc. http://clusty.com/

Newspapers onlineA collection of thousands of online newspapers.  Pick a region, pick a name, find a new perspective on world events, common themes in communities across the world and some great facts and resources for use in a classroom! http://www.onlinenewspapers.com/d

ICTOPUSIctopus (ICT online primary user support) is a support service for primary education. Anyone can sign up for the service (free of charge) and will then receive each week a six page printable magazine and a set of activity suggestions. There will also be a regular newsletter or e-bulletin. http://www.ictopus.org.uk/index.php?sec=0  

Edna Learning objectsIntegrating learning objects into teaching and learning can have a positive effect on student outcomes. The links are to freely available learning objects within the edna repository.  http://www.edna.edu.au/edna/go/schooled/school_theme_pages/pid/546

Creative Commons Search engineWhen you get to the site choose a search engine tab above and enter search query. Then click “go” to find Creative Commons-licensed media that you can legally share and reuse for free. For a quick intro to Creative Commons, check out this short video, entitled “Wanna Work Together?” http://search.creativecommons.org

Some useful tools that you can use for free in your classroom are:

Freebie Software 

Some you may know:

PhotoStory 3 for Windows – using your photographs create a slide show with text, voice and music.  It has great transition and panning options for your photos.
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/ 

Google SketchUp – A 3D software tool that combines a tool-set with an intelligent drawing system. http://sketchup.google.com/download.html

Google Earth – Offers maps and satellite images – pinpoint and save favourite places. Use google street view to view streets in the US. http://earth.google.com/

ArtRage – free version – an electronic art program.  See previous blog entry to learning all about it!  http://www.ambientdesign.com/artragedown.html

Some software you may not know about: 

50 Web 2.0 Ways to Tell a Story with Alan Levine:

This link will take you to the selection of the free online tools. Alan Levine has included an example of each tool using the same story “Dominoe’ to show what each tool offers.  It is worth exploring the different tools through this story before choosing and registering to create your own. http://cogdogroo.wikispaces.com/StoryTools

Microsoft PowerToy – image resizer.  This is a great and efficient way of reducing your photos for email/web size in batches. When you have installed it, right mouse click on your selected image(s) and Resize Pictures will appear in the menu!
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/downloads/powertoys/xppowertoys.mspx

Zamzar – Free online file conversion – helpful for changing Quicktime movie files into AVIs and downloading YouTube movies (Please remember to check copyright when downloading movies)http://www.zamzar.com/

ScratchScratch is a new programming language that makes it easy to create your own interactive stories, animations, games, music, and art — and share your creations on the web. As students (ages 8 and up) create Scratch projects, young people learn important mathematical and computational ideas, while also gaining a deeper understanding of the process of design. http://scratch.mit.edu/

GameMaker – Game Maker allows you to make exciting computer games, without the need to write a single line of code. Using easy to learn drag-and-drop actions, you can create professional looking games within very little time. You can make games with backgrounds, animated graphics, music and sound effects, and even 3D games!  http://www.yoyogames.com/gamemaker/try

Voice Thread – Create group conversations around images, documents and videos. Transform your presentations, projects and media into rich collaborative spaces. http://voicethread.com/#q.b16917.i107734

Stick figure animation – Pivot Stickfigure Animator is a unique software, that allows you to create stick figure animations easily and without any artistic skills. You can move the sections of the sick figure and easily create a chain of animation frames that can be previewed as you go. You can use more than one stick-figure in the animation, and even create your own stick figures using an easy to use visual editor that lets you assemble objects out of lines and circles. http://www.snapfiles.com/get/stickfigure.html  

You can also make a really effective slide show using stick figures in PowerPoint. Click here for help notes.  PowerPoint animation.

Free trials

Software is available for you to download and trial before you buy.  Most are for 30 days but there are some that offer longer or shorter times. Many of them are large downloads so it is suggested that you only download it if you have unlimited broadband access at home or download it to your laptop at school.

Some things worth looking at are:

The mind mapping software – Inspiration and Kidspiration
Inspire Data – (new product from Inspiration – a visual way to explore and understand data)http://www.inspiration.com/freetrial/index.cfm

Tinkerplots – is specifically designed to get students in grades 4–8 excited about what they can learn from data. Analyze data by creating colourful visual representations, helping students make sense out of real data and recognize patterns as they unfold. http://www.keypress.com/x17679.xml

Max’s Toolbox – is an early childhood view of Word. PowerPoint and Excel.  The software also includes useful templates and resources to use with students K – 2.
http://www.maxstoolbox.com/

Video editing software

Here is a list of video editing software programs if you want to create videos to be played on a home video machine.  Computers in schools all have MovieMaker which is a great way to start but this software has limited functionality and videos created in MovieMaker can only be played back on computers.

The software listed here all have free trials:

Uleadhttp://www.ulead.com/vs/

Premierhttp://www.adobe.com/products/premiere/

Muvee – for younger children – http://www.muvee.com/en/