Sunday, November 1, 2015

Podcasting in Education

Hi everyone! Today I will be talking about podcasting and why it might be useful in education/classroom setting. When teachers create podcasts for their students, it becomes beneficial to them because when creating a podcast you are able to go more in depth with what you are talking about or what you want to get across to your students. Also, teachers are able to record tutorials that their students can listen to on their own. Teachers might also record students reading a story as a fluency assessment, or as a foreign language pronunciation activity. When students create podcasts it allows them to go more in depth with what they are learning about in a lesson. It also provides them with opportunities to get their point across to listeners on a certain topic that they are covering in class. 

The two unique podcasting tools that I used this week to explore podcasts were Audio Boom and iTunes. Two key and unique features that Audio Boom has is that you are able to record your podcast and once you are done recording it you are able to go back and edit what you would like to keep and/or discard from your recording. Another feature is that you are able to upload/drop a file that you already have recorded and saved on your computer, onto the website to create an existing podcast that you have instead of recording a new one. Two key and unique features that iTunes has is that once you listen and click on a certain podcast, you are able to subscribe to it and once a new podcast is posted on that certain show, it will notify you immediately so that you are able to listen to it right when it is released on that show. Another feature is that you are able to scroll all the way down to the bottom on that certain podcast show page on iTunes and see what listeners of that podcast show also subscribed to. That means that you are able to see what other podcasts would interest you depending on that certain podcast show you first listened to, allowing you to branch out and explore podcasts that are in some way similar. 

When creating my own podcast, I used the two tools listed above. iTunes and Audio Boom went hand-in-hand when I completed this task. I used iTunes to search educational podcasts from grades K-12 and found a podcast that interested me. I listened to this podcast and summarized it and also pointed out key examples that stood out to me during the podcast episode. Once I had those key examples and a summary, I recorded those by using Audio Boom, which created my own podcast about an educational podcast I found using iTunes. 


Here you will be listening to my podcast that talks about the podcast I listened to that I found through iTunes. This podcast includes a summary of the podcast that includes 5 reasons parents should be happy that their students are in a flipped classroom. I explain what a flipped classroom is and also what type of audience this podcast should be for. You will hear the 5 reasons and also two examples that I found interesting throughout listening to the podcast. 

No comments:

Post a Comment