SCCD Faculty Development Podcasts

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Geoff Mathay Podcast Interview from June 2006

The Seattle Community College District is mourning the death of Geoff Mathay, Deaf Studies Instructor at Seattle Central Community College. Many people have shared stories, videos, and photos of Geoff and I decided to share again, this podcast interview I conducted with him in June, 2006. I asked questions about his formal college degrees, his innovative assessment techniques, his use of the web for instruction, and his summer plans. I've found comfort in hearing his voice and I've created a transcript for those who aren't part of the hearing community.

Here is the interview (18:30 minutes long).
Here is the transcript in PDF format.

Please feel free to leave comments.

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Faculty Development Podcast #31 - My Last FD Podcast


This is my last podcast as the SCCD Faculty Development Coordinator and I decided to get some help from my friends in the Office of Education / Planning/ & Distance Learning. Each of them recorded a short podcast - in less than an hour - last week and I've used excerpts from them in this final podcast.

This group has been so supportive of me and the Faculty Development Office and I feel so fortunate that I've gotten to work with and learn from them. Carin Weiss and Gracelyn Sales are shown hard at work recording during our podcasting training session. Joe Hauth and David Stephens are enjoying listening to their first podcast efforts in the photo on the right.

In addition to mentioning and thanking lots of people, this podcast also lists three more Web 2.0 resources that I've recently learned about. Links to them are provided below.

Listen to the Faculty Development Podcast #31 (15:52 minutes)
Or, read the transcript. (PDF format)

Web 2.0 Resources
SightSpeed at http://www.sightspeed.com - a FREE video telephone service that requires a web cam and broadband. I can think of many educational uses for this but here's an example for those of us who are far away from friends and family - http://www.sightspeed.com/videos/users/baby

StumbleUpon at http://www.stumbleupon.com - a FREE application that helps you find other web sites that have been discovered and rated by like-minded people.

Bubbleshare at http://www.bubbleshare.com - a FREE service that lets you to upload images and add up to 30 seconds of audio narration to them. You can add written captions, too. And, you can make them public or allow only your students to see them.

Finally, I've loved my 30 plus years here at Seattle Community College. Best wishes to all of you who do such amazing work with students.

Monday, November 20, 2006

Faculty Development Vodcast #1

This is the first Faculty Development Vodcast (like a podcast but with video instead of just audio)! It was created in Camtasia Studio Version 4 and I think it shows that vodcasts can be used for educational purposes.

I'll be showing faculty at SSCC and NSCC how to create similar demonstrations for their students at the Creating Rich Media Materials using Camtasia Studio 4 - Part 2 Workshop. The session at South will be held on Friday, Dec 1 from 2 - 4 in the TLC. The North campus session will be on Wednesday, Dec 6 from 2 - 4 in the TLC. I hope this will inspire several of you to attend.

By the way, if you have a video iPod, you can watch the video on it. But, you don't have to own a video iPod to view it - just the QuickTime Player (free) or iTunes (free) on your computer.

Finding Your Grades - Central Campus Version

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Faculty Development Podcast #30

This week's Faculty Development Podcast features a web seminar titled "Facing Facebook," a practical use of Gizmo Project - Voice over IP, and my new favorite cheap fare search engine.

Listen to the Faculty Development Podcast #30 (5:52 minutes)

Read the transcript if you prefer.

Facing Facebook and other Social Networking Technologies - PowerPoint Slides
Facing Facebook and other Social Networking Technologies - Audio in MP3 format (58:04 minutes)
Kayak for cheap fares!

Feel free to leave your comments!

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Faculty Development Podcast #29


This week's podcast includes announcements and a description of new features found in Camtasia Studio 4. One of the most important features is the ability to easily add closed captions to Camtasia Studio movies - thus qualifying them as "Universal Design." What is "Universal Design?" Listen to the podcast and find out!

Listen to the Faculty Development Podcast #29 (6:35 minutes)

Read the transcript, too.

What's new in Camtasia Studio 4?
What is "Universal Design?"
Script example using PowerPoint speaker's notes and Word.

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Faculty Development Podcast #28

This week's FD podcast has a few announcements about workshops and some thought provoking ideas from a PowerPoint presentation entitled "Did You Know..." compiled by Karl Fisch. I encourage you to view the entire presentation which is linked below.

Listen to the Faculty Development Podcast #28 (5:57 minutes)

Read the transcript, too.

Did You Know... PowerPoint presentation (8 minutes)
Sources for the facts included in the presentation
Washington Assessment Group eNewsletter - for October, 2006
The Fischbowl - Karl's staff development blog

As always, your comments are welcome!

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Translation of Dutch Blog

Shaunie Decker, a part-time instructor from North campus translated the Dutch blog for me and I've copied her translation below. She notes that this is a direct translation so some of the grammar is a bit awkward. Thank you so much, Shaunie and thanks to others who offered to help with the translation.

Here is another link to the original blog posting (in Dutch).

Charlotte 2006: Can you hear me now?

While it may seem stale (but not for me), but I am again at a podcasting workshop given by Jean Kent from Seattle Community College. The presentation is on a website, so I don’t need to type the whole story. The presenter promised to make the whole thing available in Camtasia. Follow the link for more information.

Don’t think that after tomorrow this weblog will disappear because it will be regularly updated over the next few weeks!

The photos at the bottom of the presentation are from teachers who have taken a podcasting course. It is funny that we saw a podcast that I just discovered this morning, namely material from Apple. Also, now the importance is stressed to use RSS. What struck me is that the lifespan of most presentations is around over 40-50 years. Therefore, it is no longer geeks and freaks that see these gadgets, but professionals who have chosen to catch up with the times in which we live. Jean showed us the apparatuses required to make podcasts, varying from Low Tech (the Panasonic voice recorder) to very advanced High Tech mixers and microphones. The most popular podcasts that Jean produces (weekly) are the ones in which other people are interviewed. Also she puts the lesson online. A fun example of a podcast: listen to the noise of a motor that is running well and one that is not working well. Another important advantage of podcasts is that you can make your content accessible to visually handicapped and dyslexic participants. Lessons given as podcasts free up time for active learning! Also use a web blog to make your pod casts available, is another word of advice. Strange enough, I have never seen a workshop about starting a web blog. Here people know apparently what that is and how you can nicely put it into your teaching! How far along are we with that in the Netherlands?

Another fun one: “dance math cast” immediate delivered algebra (search via iTunes).

And so Jean let us hear many more examples. If it works out, they will be available via her presentation (I can’t put it here). “Grammar Girl: quick and dirty tips for good writing”. Here we did not receive things that you could do, but that have been done! Honestly, I got more and more restless from it. How am I going to present this to my colleagues when I return home? Next to self made podcasts are there also many professional materials available through links. For example: the Tedtalks. The advertisement in the side bar is accepted.

Now DEMO TIME! Jean does a podcast. Thus Audacity is begun. She worked off a script but it sounded very natural, not read. She cut the hesitations and “uhs” out. She put (podsafe) music at the beginning and end and used fade-in and fade-out. The volume was set and this all happened faster than I can type. Save and export to MP3 and Jean is finished! Within 10 minutes she has made a podcast. Naturally, she neatly put in the ID3 tags (yes: meta data!). Naturally, her College provides a podcast server where she can place material and an RSS feed is added.

She spent 10 minutes on VOIP, then came Skype, Gizmo Project and even Google Talk! Jean uses VOIP to communicate with her students. She wants conversations with her students that she can use as lesson material. “I am so sick of typing” thus using VOIP more to send messages than e-mail. Has email seen its day? With Google Talk it is very much possible! As a bonus, Jean lets us hear how she coaches a student through a problem via VOIP. During the hour this lady had the entire hall in amazement. I didn’t see anyone walk out. Simply stated: WONDERFUL!