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Friday, May 15, 2015

Stop Motion Susustudio

Recently, a Physics teacher came in to the CTL with this idea for his students. He was going to administer an assessement, idenitfy students weak areas, and assign them those topics to create a tutorial using stop motion film making.

So, I never took Physics. I don't know anything about it. Even when It was rolled into my Physical Science class, I had a tendency to check out. The instrucotr wanted an example to show the students and an activity for them to do as the guided practice, because duh... That's what we do! 

I had already been thinking about exploring this world and found the free app for iPad, Stop Motion Studio, but somehow lost all time to play with it ahead of time. The Ed Tech Specialist, Lisa, and I sat down and learned the app in about 10 minutes. Then, we brainstormed an idea for our movie... We were going to make a stop motion movie on making a stop motion movie! 




Stop Motion Studio was actually pretty easy to learn and the price is RIGHT!  There is a paid version that allows you to upload your photos and change themes, but it's not totally necessary. We had one person write out the post it notes and place them, and the other snapped photos. Once we were done, Lisa exported the video to her camera roll and Air Dropped it to my iPad. From there, I pulled it into iMovie where I added my voice over, stock music, and slowed the frames down a bit more since there were parts that were still too fast for my eyes to read the post its. After that, I reviewed it and thought anout how i wanted to write this post and so I added a scrolling credits slide with an app called, Scrolling Credits. Now, let me say, most things technology are intuitive for me, but that app had me frustrated. I ended up figuring it out after 10-15 minutes, but that is too long for any of my students. Anyway, saved it as a photo and added it to the end of my movie. 

I love the idea of using stop motion as part of a process of learning, especially for something that requires multiple steps. The use of stop motion requires the user to take photos along the way and if the student is doing something, taking a photo, then doing the next step, taking another photo, and so on, the student has to really think about what they are doing and why. As educators, we know that people kearn and retain more if they DO rather than just read or discuss. 


Monday, May 4, 2015

You may have noticed...

If you are following my blog, you may have noticed some random videos with not much explanation being posted. Now, this is not some random person posting and hacking my account. Rather, they are products of my lessons for my school's Challenge Based Learning projects. Earlier I posted about the trial and tribulations of posting videos to Blogger and what difficulty I was experiencing. Well, once I accepted that there was basically no way around posting videos from an iPad to Blogger other than through Youtube, I began my lessons. In an effort to be authentic, I went through the process step by step with them (and there are a lot of steps when working from an iPad), inevitably posting real videos from my camera roll. Rather than deleting them, I figured "why not just leave some of the them?". I'll add some explanations to the videos since many of them were made with different apps and one of a cool mini-maker fair I attended.

Do you have stories of making examples for students? I'd love to hear!

Friday, May 1, 2015

Jenn's Monster Video

This is my video from explain everything.

UPDATE: I posted this video on my blog as an example of how to upload a video to Youtube from an iPad and then take that video and put it on Blogger.


Originally, this video serves as basically my first time working with Explain Everything. I attended a workshop in February by Ed Tech Teacher at their iPad Summit. The workshop had us actually working with apps our students work with every day. Surprising, I had never done anything with it while my students are creating tutorials and all kinds of cool things!

My findings? Explain Everything is awesome! It's a great screencasting tool and allows the user to create different slides, record voice, record animations, etc. A student of mine who has used it for math tutorials said, "Yeah, it's pretty fun".
 

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