Thursday, 4 December 2008

Digital Storytelling 2

While on the subject of Digital Storytelling, I found another website the other day that I'd like to share.

It's called Storynory and the idea behind the site is to provide audio files of children's stories. Some of the stories have some very nice illustrations to accompany them. And even better, the site is free!

There is a mix of classic stories, such as the Grimm fairytales and Aesops Fables but also some original stories unique to the Storynory site such as The Monkey Who Loved Chocolate.



The audio files can be played through the website, but can also be downloaded to be played offline, if that is easier for you to do so.

I don't know if the authors have plans to do anything more "whiteboard friendly" - maybe turn them into big books or anything like that. But for now if you want some nice stories for your class to listen to, then Storynory is well worth a visit.

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Tuesday, 25 November 2008

Podcast & Blogging Day Links

Just a quick blog post in advance of the Podcast/Blogging training day I'm delivering tomorrow in Kensington, London.

I just wanted to provide links to some of the resources that will be mentioned on the day

Teacherblogs - trainees blog posts

My Documents on Scribd

My Slideshare Presentations

My Podcasts on Podomatic

Podcasting with a Dictaphone - guide and presentation

The Think Bank Example Wiki

Twitter

Web 2.0 Links on Delicious

Digital Native web links on Delicious

If we create any blogs on the day - I'll add the links here so you can find them all after the training day.


http://sharky22.wordpress.com

http://boredoffacebook.wordpress.com

http://kangaroopaw.wordpress.com

http://coffeeteas.wordpress.com

http://kelmscottschool.wordpress.com

http://res08.wordpress.com

http://dibdobdeb.wordpress.com

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Sunday, 5 October 2008

Podcasting with a dictaphone

I've been getting ready to do a podcasting training day in a few weeks and have been looking into different ways to podcast.

A neat little gadget that I picked up this week is the Olympus Digital Voice Recorder. I bought the WS-311M model, but there's a few different ones out there. I bought mine from Amazon for about £50 but shop around and you might get a better deal.
Basically what you get is a pocket-sized voice recorder that you can take anywhere with you. It runs of a single AAA battery and the 512MB model can record about 8 hours of audio, more if you change the recording quality (up to 130 hours or so).

This would be a very convenient way of getting interviews into a podcast since the students could take this anywhere; they could record "Vox Pops" with people around the school, or even outside the school. The Olympus has an external microphone jack if you wanted to plug a better microphone into it.

The neat bit is getting the files off the device. Basically you slide the battery compartment off, and it reveals a USB stick. Simply plug the Olympus into a USB port (You might need to use the supplied USB extension cable if your port is hard to get to) and then you can just take the files off as you would with any other USB file stick.
To process the files, I had planned on using Audacity, as it seems to be the one that everyone recommends. It's free, which is always a bonus. But this is where I hit a slight issue. The Olympus records as WMA files, and due to licensing issues Audacity cannot open WMA files.

This problem is not a major one, however. A quick look on Google turned up a nice, free, file converter that will convert WMA files to MP3 files with a single right click. It's called Switch, and you can get it here: http://nch.com.au/switch/

It was a very simple job to convert the file (or files) from the Olympus into MP3 to play around with in Audacity.

I've recorded a sample podcast with the Olympus, which I have then uploaded to Podomatic.com. I guess I could host it directly on this blog, but I wanted to see how Podomatic worked.

The direct link to the podcast on Podomatic is here.

I'm also going to test out the Podomatic embedded player, to see how that works. In theory, this should appear here:





Hope that worked!

If you want to see my presentation about Podcasting, then I've uploaded it to Slideshare here.

Podcasting
View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own.

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Thursday, 10 July 2008

Wicked Decent Learning

Just trawling my pingbacks via Technorati, and I noticed a link from a podcast site in the US called Wicked Decent Learning. Turns out they'd reviewed my blog as part of a section on Whiteboard websites.

They seemed to like it - which was good. Thanks for the good review guys!

If you want to hear the podcast, pop over to this page, and download it from there. It sounds like a decent podcast for teachers, whatever your interests.

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