Model Call Girl in Bikash Puri Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Â
Podcasting 101: A Guide for Students
1. PODCASTING 101
Jane Bannester, Ritenour High School
Follow presentation at http://bit.ly/2rNXgeQ
@banniejanie
@KRHSmedia on Twitter and IG
2. INTRODUCTION
Get out your cell phone, iPad, laptop, or any
personal device that has a microphone that
records.
Record your neighbor answering this question:
“Why are you interested in today’s presentation
on Podcasting?” (you have 2:00 min)
5. Matching students abilities with assessments
can improve scores:
…effective student performance has been linked to
students receiving several options to help match
assignment to students’ abilities and learning styles, a
technique that enhances their motivation to learn.
(Allington & Johnston, 2002; Bauman & Duffy, 1997.)
New Century Program Model, newcenturyeducation.org
5
Think About It
7. Let’s talk about Podcasting
Podcasts are digital media
files (most often audio, but
they can be video as well),
which are produced in a
series.
8. Let’s talk about Podcasting
Consider that Americans in 2015 listen to
about 21 million hours of podcast audio
every day, according to a study by Edison
Research. That same research firm found that
within a year, total podcast listening among
Americans jumped 18 percent from a similar
study it conducted the previous spring.
(http://mediashift.org/2015/08/how-and-why-journalism-schools-should-teach-podcasting/)
9. Let’s talk about Podcasting
Consumers spent approximately 60 hours a
week in total consuming media across all
platforms, Nielsen said. (variety.com, 2013)
In the United States, of those aged
between 18 and 34 years of age, 90.3 %
said they listened to the radio every week,
which means 65.2 million young people
listened to the radio. (World Radio Day, Feb
13, 2015.)
9
11. Getting Started
SUBJECT:
What is the content of your Podcast?
Think of it like a magazine, in that it
serves a narrow or specific audience.
FORMAT!
A format is the sequence or order that
the shows production elements go in.
12. Getting Started – Billboards of Podcast
Professional Format Example:
Podbay The Stitcher
List
28. Getting Started
Ritenour Format Example:
“We’ve Got Issues”: teen specific issues
like bullying, underage drinking
“STL Sports Weekly”: weekly covering HS
sports
“Ritenour 411”: news and events effecting
the Ritenour community
30. Ask yourself?
Ask:
Who is your audience?
What subjects or materials are you
covering?
How often will you have a new
podcast?
Music and copyright?
Would you listen to it?
31.
32. Recording: What do I need?
Students can use smartphones
or
USB plug in microphones
(check out Snoball, Logitech)
35. Podcast friendly music
All music, sound effects should be copyright free, if you're not
creating your own. Students can go to http://
creativecommons.org/legalmusicforvideos to access a list
of copyright free music sites.
Additional:
• The Free Sound Project
• SoundSnap
• Flash Kit - Sound FX
• Podcast Bumper Music
• Four Bees Free Media
• Podsafe Audio
• Mutopia
• ACIDplanet (offers a free 8-pack of loops each Friday)
36. Hosting: What do I need?
• Podbean
• 8 Best Sites to Host Your Podcast
• Host Your Podcast on Google Drive for Free
• iTunes - Podcasting Information
• Free Podcasting Hosting Ideas
37.
38. Classroom Ideas?
Informative: Students can create TED
talks on various topics and deliver
findings through audio, video
recordings.
https://sites.google.com/site/ahstedtalk/creating-a-ted-talk
40. Classroom Ideas?
Reviews: have them review a text, book, article
and give opinions. Students can provide
recommendations to books that they love.
http://www.readwritethink.org/classroom-resources/
printouts/podcasts-nuts-bolts-creating-30311.html
41. Classroom ideas?
Mini-lesson plans: have the students become
the teachers by creating their own lesson
delivery via podcast.…AKA Khan Academy.
(This is also an idea for teachers. “How do I
do that science lab?”)
45. Classroom ideas?
Creative Writing: students create a serial
podcast from a story they write, then perform it
like the old days of Radio.
http://www.readwritethink.org/classroom-resources/lesson-plans/audio-
broadcasts-podcasts-oral-901.html
47. So many ideas!!!
• How to Integrate Podcasts in the Classroom
• Students interview relatives about their life histories, and then combine the audio
interview with family photos in a video project.
• Students learn about a different country by interviewing a recent traveler. They record
the interview and then create a digital travel album.
• Students create a faux advertising campaign to convince immigrants to settle the new
American colonies.
• Students use audio recording to interview sources for articles for a class newspaper.
• Students write and record short stories and add music and sound effects.
• Teacher records a tutorial that students listen to on their own
• Present student writing through a poetry slam.
• Teacher records and broadcasts group discussions.
• Teachers might record students reading a story as a fluency assessment, or as a foreign
language pronunciation activity.
• On a field trip, students use an iPod with a voice recorder to take notes and a digital
camera to take photos. They then create a guided tour in iMovie.
• http://edtechteacher.org/tools/multimedia/podcasting/
48. Student Podcast Examples
9 Podcasts for Teachers and Kids
http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/10-podcasts-
teachers-and-kids
Youth Radio Podcast
https://youthradio.org/news/article/youth-radio-podcast-
college-admissions/
57. Thank you!
This presentation can be located at:
http://bit.ly/2rNXgeQ
Jane Bannester
Ritenour High School
bannesterj@ritenourschools.org
Audio and Video Teacher
Reach me at Twitter
@banniejanie or @KRHSmedia
ritenourlive.org