Saturday, May 18, 2013

Final Digital Story Post


Hey All,
Only 83 more minutes until Youtube will finish uploading my video.  I am hoping it all goes okay.  It has been churning away uploading for 3.5 hours already.  Hope you enjoy it.

Here is the url that it will be uploaded at when if finally finishes.  I will come back and embed it after if is done.

http://youtu.be/_OuiSTzGGoE

http://youtu.be/_0uiSTzGGoE

I have the link twice as I am typing it on a different computer as I didn't want to disturb the uploading process on the mac.  I wasn't  sure if there was a capital "O" or a zero in there.  So I have one of each there.

Deb

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Another piece of my project

Below is the url which I haven't event tested yet.  If you slog through looking at this very rough concatenation of pieces of a 20 minute group discussion I had with 4 teachers, and if you have thoughts about the order in which I should show each piece, I'd love to see them.

I know I need more narrative in between in the places where I have text only, to help explain my perspective of how the teachers are changing.

Deb



http://youtu.be/b8PZ7UGZNsE


PS.  I made this on my brand new as of yesterday, mac book pro.  That is the exciting part.  The difficulty is I still had difficulty in getting the video to youtube directly from iMovie.  So I didn't go directly from imovie and made a quicktime movie first, then uploaded that using the video manager on youtube.  That took 3  hours of rendering, and it still isn't visible on youtube yet, and this is only 10 minutes of video and I am worried I might not cut, and might add more.  ACK!  So I might be trying to upload starting on Friday.  I thought this machine was supposed to be faster!

Chapter 15: Copyright and Fair Use


"In short, we all came for clarity and left with grayity."  I think that statement from Chapter 15 sums up how to think about using someone else's work. 

Ohler's suggestions about how to talk with students about if they would like people downloading their music or art without asking seemed practical.  Naturally students, and any of us, would be flattered to have someone like our work and want to download it, so we say we would not mind.  Then the follow-up question asking if that was your soul source of making money, how would you feel?  Nice.  This can all lead to the frame of mind for students to ask permission to use someone else's work--a good habit to cultivate.

I was happy to see the more tangible guidelines offered from what the law says, although I realize not necessarily applicable to all situation. 
1. 10% or 30 seconds of songs or movies  (Does that mean if a a movie is 90 minutes long, you can use 10% or 9 minutes?)
2. 10% or up to 1000 words of text
3. No more than 5 images from one artist (Does that mean in one project?  So a kid could use 10 images as long as each one was in a different project from the student?)

So I agree with some of my classmates--perhaps it is easier just to compose everything one's self, and only search the Creative Commons site....

Adding music to videos, and doing mash-ups just seems like an exercise in futility now.  Too many permissions to get.  I can't use those first videos I made on a website for my job, as even though I am working for a non-profit in the name of education, the website does market our services to schools as well as provide professional learning information. 

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Chapter 14

So being media literate means being a media persuader?  If that is the case then being literate means being able to persuade, and being math literate means being able to persuade with numbers?  That seems a narrow definition, unless the definition of persuasion itself is more broad.  Seems like self expression should be right up there when thinking of what makes one literate, or being able to communicate ideas or perspectives, for sharing understanding, but not necessarily for sharing in order to persuade.

“But rest assured that unless you actually create your own media, and do so paying particular attention to how to most effectively engage and convince your audience, then any appreciation you have of media’s persuasive abilities will be shallow and theoretical at best.”  Here he says that “engaging” an audience is important—perhaps it doesn’t have to be to persuade—seems mighty Western of him, to think that the only purpose of literacy is to convince others.

Rubrics that say, “in progress”, and “satisfactory” and “exceeds expectations” are only helpful in figuring out how one is graded if there is a plethora of examples available for students to be able to determine where the bar is for those expectations. 

It takes him a while to get to saying something specific—the first of which is watch it twice.  When I am grading projects, or even open response test items, I often read or look at everyone’s first.  Then pile them into like categories.  Then read or look at each again to start getting specific.  I also often use post-its for comments, in case I change my mind about what I think, from looking at it more than one time.  Now I will keep reading to see if he offers something as specific as this…

Ohler’s suggestion to see if you find yourself squinting when looking at student work is practical.  From his suggestion to have students reshoot photos that make you squint, I can tell he is suggesting that the teacher give the students feedback before the final production is done.  This also seems very practical.

Audio carries the story.  Well that seemed like the Captain Obvious statement to me. Stories have been told for ages.  I have painted my house while listening to the series of Pirates of the Caribbean playing on my tiny DVD machine that I couldn’t see, and the story was carried just fine.

Good question to ask a videographer: “How does the music relate to the story?”

Good question to ask oneself while making a DST: “If the music were removed, how would the story fare?”

Now here is a good exercise:  to determine the power of music, put different music to the same bit of video to conjure different feelings.

“Does your mind squint?”  Yes my mind squints at that question, tyring to figure out a specific example of what he means.  I am guessing it is the same as when  an English teacher would write “Awkward” next to part of something I was writing.  It didn’t really help me figure out how to write it better—I knew what I was trying to say, so I couldn’t see what the reader couldn’t figure out.  Mind squints seem like the same thing to me.  Asking a question of the student in that spot, might be a good way to get her to see what is making the teacher squint.

Storyboard...Who is doing the math thinking?

I have been having major trouble with memory on my ipad, which is where I edit my video.  Anyhow, I could swear I posted this last week to my blog.  But I do not find it when I look now.  I had it up on youtube.  Anyhow, here is my storyboard explanation.

And now as I paste in the code to embed the video, it is giving me a warning that the HTML cannot be accepted as the closing tag has no matching opening tag.  Ah, technology, it loves you or it hates you. 

I have a new macbook pro coming next week--so I will probably be either hating this or loving it, some more....

Here is the youtube url for my video as embedding seems not to have worked:

http://youtu.be/s6Lda4_XWT8