On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
Using rich media in teaching: big ideas, simple steps
1. Using rich media in
teaching:
Big ideas,
simple steps
Terese Bird tmb10@le.ac.uk
Learning Technologist and SCORE Research Fellow
Institute of Learning Innovation
East Midlands Deanery VLE Day, 22 March 2013
www.le.ac.uk
2. What will we talk about?
• Big ideas – learning design
• Comparing the formats
• Text
• Sound
• Video
• Interactive
3. What are you hoping to learn today?
Photo by shaun wong on Flickr
8. What format for content?
• It’s usually faster to read than to listen or watch
• A picture paints a thousand words
• Photos can mislead
• More is communicated by voice than just the words
(Nie, Armellini, Witthaus, & Barkland, 2010)
• Video: some things must be demonstrated
• Interactivity encourages exploration
9. Mobile is important
• In mid-2012, 51% of UK citizens
owned a smartphone (The
Paypers, 2012)
• 14% of adults in Europe owned
tablet in 2012 (Lomas, 2013)
• 35% of UoL Medical School 3rd
years own an iPad
Photo by mike cogh on Flickr
10. What format for content?
Medium Positives Negatives
Text •Speed •Flat
•Pre-existing material •Does not communicate
emotion
Image •Much communicated in •Can be misleading
a single simple package without context
Sound •More communicated by •Not seen as flashy as
voice than just words video?
•Convenient for
multitasking
•Smaller file than video
Video •Most info •Bulky and padded
communicated •Demands attention
•Great for
demonstrating skills
11. Text – think ebooks!
• PDF with appropriate images
• iBooks Author – PDF and .ibook (iPad) formats
• Free with latest Mac OS
• Print to PDF – it’s beautiful
• For the .ibook formats – can include video
14. Take advantage of iBooks Author
• Free with latest Mac OS
• Saves as pdf and text
15. Now make an epub
• Copy and paste the text into Pages.
• Add photos.
• Add video if you’re sure the devices can handle it
– iOS: iBooks
– Android: Kobo, Ibis Reader
• Let it flow!
• Tips: Only inline. No floating objects.
16. Calibre
• Take a Word doc
• Save as html
• Import into Calibre
• Save as epub or mobi
• Pdf to epub doesn’t really work
• Also try epubbud.com
17. Picture books!
• Just use simple pdf!!!
• Brilliant results!
• Maps, drawings, images
18. Handy guide to ebooks
File format What device positives negatives
pdf Everything Runs on Does not flow,
everything does not take
advantage of the
device’s power
epub Everything but Flows, takes
Kindle advantage of the
devices’s power
Open source,
somewhat
futureproof
mobi Kindle Kindle is big Kindle only
.ibooks Apple iBooks only Beautiful & easy Apple iBooks only
iPad is market
leader
20. Sound
• Why sound?
– Copyright is easier – recorded lectures
– File size is smaller
– Listeners can do something else at the same time
– No bad hair days – staff like it!
– Voice communicates more than the printed word
– Effective and easy way to close distance
22. Audioboo
• Like YouTube for sound
• Record in browser
• Attract comments in browser
• Or simply upload
• RSS out, iTunes out it’s like magic
• Can send these to Apple if you like
• 5-minute sound limit
23. Soundcloud
• A bit more socially aware
• The app lets you record so good for students to
record their own stuff and post up
• Very intuitive
• Longer sound limit
24. Examples of use
• Audio feedback – increased marks & retention
http://www.le.ac.uk/duckling
• Voice discussions
• Audioboo – Field use – listen to teacher’s description
of a flower, student audio-records her own
comments and findings
• Student can record, using Audioboo for iPhone (don’t
use iPad app yet)
28. YouTube facts
• 10 minute limit
• Great to embed into Moodle
• Comments are a mixed blessing
• Good statistics
• Use branding if you make one
• Not too easy to download the video
29. How to embed YouTube into Moodle
• In YouTube, click Share – Embed – to get code
30. How to embed YouTube into Moodle
• In Moodle, select Compose a web page,
• Change to html, paste in embed code
31. How to embed a Vimeo or YouTube video
into your website
• This video on ScreenR will show you:
http://www.screenr.com/fiF7
32. Vimeo
• Longer video than
YouTube
• Much less junk
• Pretty much just as
easy to do
• Downloadable
34. Recorded lectures
• Record the face or just the slides?
• Streaming or download?
• Automatic enterprise, or one-by-one?
• Huge server space required, expensive
• Students like them to revise, good for language
issues
35.
36.
37. Editing movies – keep it simple
• iMovie – free with Mac – saves as .mov, .mp4
• Windows MovieMaker – but doesn’t save as mp4
• Only go to Final Cut Express if you have to!
– Bleeped out sounds
– Fuzzed out faces
– A cut-out logo floating over the image
38. Narrated presentation
• Screen capture software: QuickTime, Camtasia,
iShowU, or ScreenR
• Speak out your presentation and record, save as a
.mov file or .mp4
• Put on YouTube or Vimeo or iTunes U, link from
there into Moodle
• Slideshare – load presentation, add narration, link
from there into Moodle
41. Thank you!!!
• Conole, G. (2013). The 7Cs of Learning Design. SlidesharePresentation. Retrieved March 21,
2013, from http://www.slideshare.net/GrainneConole/7-cs-learningdesignmooc
• Lomas, N. (2013). Forrester: Tablet Ownership In Europe To Rise 4x In 5 Years — 55% Of
Region’s Online Adults Will Own One By 2017, Up From 14% In 2012 | TechCrunch.
TechCrunch Website. Retrieved February 27, 2013, from
http://techcrunch.com/2013/02/20/forrester-tablet-ownership-in-europe-to-rise-4x-in-5-years-55-o
• Nie, M., Armellini, A., Witthaus, G., & Barkland, K. (2010). Delivering University Curricula:
Knowledge, Learning and INnovation Gains — University of Leicester. Leicester. Retrieved
from http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/beyond-distance-research-
alliance/projects/duckling
• ThePaypers. (2012). The Paypers. Insights in payments. Retrieved January 3, 2013, from
http://www.thepaypers.com/news/mobile-payments/smartphone-adoption-in-uk-reaches-
51-students-lead-the-way/747745-16