EMMA webinar series: Capturing and delivering effective video as part of your MOOC including the innovative use of video to enrich your learning offer
MOOCs have always been associated with intensive use of video, early MOOCs were based almost entirely on video recordings of lectures, discussions, talking heads or interviews, and even though the production value may be modest, video still remains one of the highest costs on a MOOC budget. Increasingly the question is raised which kinds of videos lead to the best student learning outcomes in a MOOC? And which production techniques and methods provide a higher learning efficiency. In this webinar, we provide an overview of both production techniques and pedagogical approaches related to the use of video in MOOCs. This webinar aims at encouraging MOOC authors to explore new ways of using video.
Find out more about EMMA: http://project.europeanmoocs.eu/
2. Video is popular as a teaching tool:
• Container of large amounts of content
• Self paced, self-regulated and independent learning
3. Video is popular as a teaching tool:
• Container of large amounts of content
• Self paced, self-regulated and independent learning
“Media are mere vehicles that deliver instruction but
do not influence student achievement any more than
the truck that delivers our groceries causes changes in
our nutrition”
(R. Clark, 1983)
Focus should be on the learner experience, less on the
instruction.
4. Provider Perspective
• Putting videos on EMMA
• What kind of videos can be used in a
MOOC? When to use video for learning?
• How to maximise student learning
outcomes with video in a MOOC?
• Prejudices about video
Learner Perspective
• Interface
Contents
5. Putting videos on EMMA
• Put videos on YouTube or Vimeo (account
needed for YouTube, EMMA can provide
access to Vimeo by v-app)
• Embed videos on EMMA in the appropriate
spot
• Also learners can load videos (YouTube only)
within their personal blog pages
6. Key question 1
What kind of videos can be used in a MOOC?
• Lecture-style videos: instructor(s) with/without
slides or graphs, in office, classroom, studio
• Tutorial videos: video screencast, Khan-style
• Expert interviews
• Panel discussion
• Documentary/reportage style (live demos, e.g.
surgeries; location shoot)
• All moving images: archives, Europeana…
8. When to use video?
• As content container,
yes but more interestingly also…
• To show complex (or expensive, or dangerous)
experiments
• To illustrate ideas using slow-motion or animation
• For a virtual field visit
• To demonstrate techniques or mechanical skills
• (assessment)
9. When to use video?
• As content container,
yes but more interestingly also…
• To show complex (or expensive, or dangerous)
experiments
• To illustrate ideas using slow-motion or animation
• For a virtual field visit
• To demonstrate techniques or mechanical skills
• (assessment)
10. When to use video?
• Introduction: engage, stimulate, motivate, also
signpost or recap
• Activation: outcome directly related to the use of
the video
• Affection: facilitate empathy, emotion,
engagement
• Enable cognition: analysis, synthesis,
interpretation
• Visualise
(based on J.Koumi)
11. When to use video?
• Introduction: engage, stimulate, motivate, also
signpost or recap
• Activation: outcome directly related to the use of
the video
• Affection: facilitate empathy, emotion,
engagement
• Enable cognition: analysis, synthesis,
interpretation
• Visualise
(based on J.Koumi)
12. Key question 2
• How to maximise student learning outcomes
with video in a MOOC?
‼ Does not equal more views.
Videos with high numbers of views usually have a direct
connection to course assignments or assessments
Guo, Kim, Rubin; McConachie, Schmidt e a; Hibbert; Chauhan, Goel
13. How to maximise student learning?
• Short videos have higher engagement (impact)
• Segment videos: 6 minutes seems to be a good
compromise between what instructors want to
instruct and what students accept.
Shorter videos are also more engaging than
longer videos.
Videos of <30 seconds are most likely watched all
the way (85%). Drop off starts and levels to 50%
between 2 and 10 minutes.
Put the most important parts of the message at
the very beginning.
14. How to maximise student learning?
• Talking heads edited with slides are more
engaging than slides alone.
• Requires post-production editing (unless
players allow simultaneous view)
‼ Classroom lecture recordings require
preproduction and planning in order to be
engaging
15. How to maximise student learning?
• Videos with a more personal feel are more
engaging.
• Record in an informal setting
‼ High production values do not pay off, but it is
important to apply the “laws” of good quality
media production, e.g. eye contact, good
audio, clear graphs, readable text…
Ambiguous effect of production values…
16. How to maximise student learning?
• Candid drawing (“Khan Academy Style”) is more
engaging than PowerPoint slides or screencasts.
• Continuous speaking, motion and visual flow
engage the learning.
‼ More pre-production planning needed, does not
suit all instructors (clear handwriting, good
drawing skills, careful layout planning, good
presentation skills, good voice technique,
prepared narrative…)
17. How to maximise student learning?
• Quality of the teacher as an “actor” is
important: enthusiastic delivery, relating to
personal experiences, humour, create
suspense etc. is more engaging.
‼ Speed up text, edit out pauses and filler words
in post-production can help.
19. Prejudices
• Are students watching your videos?
– Do they, yes or no?
– Preference for text materials
– Video is boring
– If the video is not well made, they won’t look
– Is it worth all the trouble?
21. Prejudices
• Are students watching your videos?
• Is video difficult to produce?
• Is video expensive?
22. Interface: the player side
• Navigate
– Play, pause, stop
– Volume control
– Full screen play out
– Increase/decrease speed
– Current time/total time of video
– Progress bar
– Navigation by keyboard
• Captions
– Subtitle options
23.
24. Interface
• Download, view off-line, watch on youtube
• Full screen mode, adjust video quality
• Interaction with(in) video is important
– In-video activity (e.g. quiz)
– Edit, segment, extract (A/V)
– Annotate
– Tag
– Quiz
– Assessment
– Statistics
– Search in video, in supplementary materials
25. Interface
• Search inside video, inside transcript, inside
presentation
• Supplement
– Presentation slides
– Related document
– Transcript of video
– Language selection
• Secondary screen integration
26. Interface
• Favorites, add to watch later, personal playlist,
tag, annotate,
• Social functionalities
– Share
– Recommend
– Annotate
– Like etc...
• Support: browser issues, player issues
27. All originally created materials are de facto copyrighted
If you want to share as an Open Education Resource or
under a CC license, this has to be explicitly declared.
• Warning: the newly composed work inherits the underlying
rights of its components.
• Note: international context of the newly composed work
possible discrepancies with your own (national) legislation.
CC version 4.0
Intellectual property aspects (add’l)