Hi Andrew
In November, a mate invited me to assess a bunch of his students'
presentations. They were undertaking a subject called "managing the
networked environment" as part of a business computing subject.
Three students (of about 20) used clips from YouTube in their
presentations.
One important thing that they learnt was to cache the video. The
easiest way to do this was to set the video clip running in the
background before they began their talk, with the sound muted. Then,
when they came to present the video, they could replay it with the
sound on. This helped avoid the clip stuttering as it was fed
through the university network.
In talking to my mate afterwards, he said that, in his experience,
students are using videos from YouTube (and other sources) more and
more often in their presentations.
--
Jonathan O'Donnell
mailto:[log in to unmask]
http://purl.nla.gov.au/net/jod
+61 4 2575 5829
On 10/01/2007, at 2:44 AM, Andrew Oliver wrote:
>
> Slightly off topic but does anyone know of any examples of youTube
> being
> used for teaching and learning? I'm thinking along them lines of
> anything
> form the presentation of a video lecture through to student and class
> projects.
>
> Many thanks
>
> Andy
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