Showing posts with label Podcasts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Podcasts. Show all posts

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Podcasting booktalks

I love podcasting booktalks.

It's all my friend Jill's fault. She asked me to do one for her middle school kids as an example, and now I just love doing them. I find myself planning them and when I read a book I think about what piece of it I might use to do a booktalk on it. I even want to do booktalks on books I haven't yet read!

It's really not all that unusual, I guess - booktalking was one of my favorite things in Youth Lit class when I was in grad school. I remember doing a booktalk on "Child of the Northern Spring" (Persia Woolley - it's the King Arthur story told from Guinevere's perspective) and I did it in the first person as Guinevere. Perhaps it's the theatre in me that likes booktalking so well.

In any case, I've done three booktalks for Jill so far and have gotten my friend John to agree to do one, too - he has a GREAT voice and will be Nicholas Flamel for a booktalk on Michael Scott's "The Alchemyst."

Last Friday I went to Jill's library and worked with some of her kids on the finer points of expression and performance when creating and reading their own podcasts, as well as some of finer points of editing in Audacity. We had a fine time, and they started a few new podcasts that I'm hoping to hear soon on their site. It's so cool - not only are the kids getting into this (and Jill says that the books that they podcast are flying off the shelves), but the teachers are getting into it, too, and volunteering (or in some cases, agreeing) to read booktalks. Some of them are interested enough to pick music for the background, and some of them are happy to let the group of sixth-graders who are the "podcasters" for the school do the editing and choose the music. What a great collaboration - and how great for the kids to be seen as the experts on this!

It's good to work with librarians. It's good to BE a librarian. What other teaching job allows you to study ALL subjects instead of just focusing on one?

Hmm, does that make me indecisive?

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Back again

Well, so I'm not a prolific blogger. It's been MONTHS since I wrote here, and all kinds of things have happened, all kinds of opportunities have been missed. Ah, well. I've always been sort of like that; I kept a diary as a kid for awhile, then put it aside and didn't do anything with it for ages in between entries. Finally stopped altogether. Guess I'm easily distracted with the next new thing!

In any case, I use this primarily for the Blogs/Wikis/Podcasts class, so that's generally what prompts me to write. In fact, though, at the moment, I'm not coming up with anything that seems to be particularly full of wit, humor, and/or instruction. Maybe it's because we had yesterday off, maybe it's because I haven't had enough coffee, or maybe it's just too close to lunchtime.

Best I can do right now, I guess, is point you to this site I just found. I'm sitting here in amazement because I never saw it before, although it's apparently been around since November of 2005, according to The Wayback Machine:

TLT Group's Exploration Guide: Educational Uses of Blogs, Wikis, RSS Feeds, etc.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

More Wikis, Podcasts, and Blogs stuff

Some articles and websites I've clipped

I've been collecting articles and websites forever, it seems, on various topics, figuring that some day I'd find some use for them. Actually, I do that with a lot of things...it's the pack rat syndrome, my dad always said, but I prefer to thing of myself as a collector. As if he had room to talk!
But I digress...
Here are some links to articles or sites that I found interesting on the various topics we'll be discussing in the workshop. I've got zillions more, but I'll just list a few lest it become totally overwhelming:

Podcasts:
20 Ideas for a better podcast (Lifehacker)
Podcast Books (Long Elementary School Podcasts via Will Richardson's blog)
Podcasts from California's Summer Reading Program

Wikis:
Ed week on Wikis (via Will Richardson's blog)
Great Deconstruction of Student Wiki Work (via Will Richardson again; you should just read his blog!!!)

Blogs
BlogSafety a forum to discuss and learn about safe blogging and social networking
Bloggers' FAQ about student blogging from the Electronic Frontier Foundation
Cool 7th Grade Science Blogs (once again via Will Richardson)

RSS
12 Things You Can Get Besides New on the Web via RSS (Lifehacker)
How to use RSS feeds (Lifehacker)

I think that's all for now - I'm starting to feel overwhelmed by the number I have clipped/bookmarked. Time to organize a little better...