EMU
professors use podcasting to broaden teaching
horizons
Guey-Meei Yang has used podcasts to tape guest speakers
in her classrooms and plans to expand the technological
practice to include students, faculty and art gallery viewers
discussing a particular piece of art. Toni Knechtges has
used podcasts as a launching point to have her students
debate business practices that showed up in the news. And,
for Jim Berry, using podcasts is a key component to using
technological pedagogy in the classroom as a whole new
way of teaching.
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ART LESSON: Amy Yancho, a senior from
Montrose,
simulates listening to a podcast of artwork in the New
Student Center. Guey-Meei Yang, an assistant
professor of visual arts education, plans to have some
of her students, during the winter term, use podcasts
that include comment from faculty showing art at the
Faculty Art Show, art historians and gallery visitors.
Yang was one of a dozen EMU faculty and lecturers
who participated in the EMU Podcasting Initiative, a
pilot program, this past fall. Photo by John Ryan |
Ten Eastern Michigan University faculty and two lecturers
recently participated in the EMU Podcasting Initiative.
The pilot program, which took place during the fall term,
was an innovative collaboration between ICT, Continuing
Education, Faculty Council and the Bruce K. Nelson Faculty
Development Center.
"One of the things faculty have worked on and learned
is how to put together a quality streaming and audio podcast
that supports learning in the classroom," said Debi Silverman,
assistant professor in the School of Health Sciences and
a Faculty Development Fellow.
A podcast is a Web feed of audio or video file that is
placed on the Internet for anyone to subscribe. The subscription
feed automatically delivers new content using an RSS or
Really Simple Syndication. This feature distinguishes a
podcast from a simple download or real-time streaming audio
or video. The process of podcasting enables educators to
provide students with audio recordings that can be accessed — any
time and any place — even when the student is
not connected to a computer.
Silverman said the Faculty Development Center worked with
faculty to learn and pedogogically understand how to use
a podcast while ICT provided a framework of support with
equipment. The program was modeled after those used at
Purdue, UCLA, Duke and Penn State, which are recognized
nationally as early adopters of using podcasting.
"We're definitely at the front end of the pack in using
this type of technology as a resource for student learning," Silverman
said.
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