But it was a way for our professor to engage us in a rudimentary form of "remix" and "mashup," common practices among youth that were mostly unfamiliar to us teachers enrolled in this semester's reading education seminar on multiliteracies at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville. For that reason, I could appreciate the professor's pedagogy: giving a purposely unstructured assignment with minimal parameters and setting us free to playfully explore the potential and pitfalls of computer-mediated content creation.
Still, as you will see, my resulting slideshow (or "screencast"), is decidedly teacher-centered and bears that unmistakable corporate imprint that only PowerPoint software can convey -- so clean, so slick, and oh so sterile. (The 2-minute, 30-second presentation is designed to be a conversation starter for teens and teachers about the obstacles and opportunities involved in "growing up digital." It also ties into a thematic, annotated reading list I compiled on the subject of digital literacy.)
Nonetheless, I am proud of my lil' mashup for three reasons:
- Although I did rely on the ubiquitous and wholly familiar PowerPoint application, I prepared my sound clips using Audacity, a free, open source, cross-platform audio editor. Through trial and error, I learned to import and edit music files, cut and paste sound clips, and export a wav file, essentially creating the "soundtrack" for my slideshow.
- To push my content out to the wider Internet audience, I used a free Web 2.0 application called SlideShare. SlideShare enables users to upload PowerPoint slides and create a product that is truly replicable, shareable, embeddable.
- Before I could turn my uploaded slideshow into a "screencast" with synchronized music, I had to convert my wav file into an mp3. For this operation, I tried a free demo version of Switch Sound File Conversion Software.
Whew! All this without benefit of teacher, textbook, user manual, or live help desk. Just experimentation with a bit of obsession thrown in.
My biggest take-away? The amount of time and dedication it took for me to undertake this style of self-moderated, trial-and-error learning. These are the new literacy practices that many young people regularly engage in outside the confines of the traditional classroom. Amazing!
Overall, I am pleased with the results. What do you think?
Growing Up Online
View another webinar from Jennifer Lubke
Looks great... congrats... I can't wait until you are in such demand that I can become a house husband....
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