Mediasite as an Asynchronous Student Support Tool: Using Lecture Capture Systems such as Sonic Foundry’s Mediasite to Support Student Learning Outside of the Classroom

2017 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 162-189
Author(s):  
Lyn Keith ◽  
Lisle Waldron
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Nordmann ◽  
Anne Clark ◽  
El Spaeth ◽  
Jill R. D. MacKay

AbstractMuch has been written about instructor attitudes towards lecture capture, particularly concerning political issues such as opt-out policies and the use of recordings by management. Additionally, the pedagogical concerns of lecturers have been extensively described and focus on the belief that recording lectures will impact on attendance and will reduce interactivity and active learning activities in lectures. However, little work has looked at the relationship between attitudes towards lecture capture and broader conceptions of learning and teaching. In this pre-registered study, we administered the Conceptions of Learning and Teaching scale and a novel lecture capture attitude scale to 159 higher education teachers. We found that appreciation of active learning predicted more positive attitudes towards lecture recordings as an educational support tool, whilst higher teacher-centred scores predicted greater concern about the negative educational impact of recordings. The effects observed were small; however, they are strong evidence against the view that it is instructors who value participatory and active learning that are opposed to lecture capture. Exploratory analyses also suggested that those who did not view recordings as an essential educational resource record fewer of their lectures, highlighting the real-world impact that attitudes can have, and further strengthening the need for staff to be provided with evidence-based guidance upon which to base their teaching practice. Data, analysis code, and the pre-registration are available athttps://osf.io/uzs3t/.


2013 ◽  
pp. 1245-1254
Author(s):  
Susan Vajoczki ◽  
Susan Watt

This case examines the incremental introduction of lecture-capture as a learning technology at a research-intensive university with the goal of addressing issues created by increases in both undergraduate enrolments and disability accommodation needs. This process began with podcasting lectures, leading ultimately to a lecture capture system with closed captioning. At each step, the changes were evaluated in terms of their impact on student learning, acceptability to students and faculty, and application to different disciplines. This evidence-based approach is in keeping with the research culture of the academy and has been helpful in advocating for budgetary support and encouraging faculty participation. As a result of this project, the authors unexpectedly gained substantial knowledge about the complexity of students’ lives, the impact of that complexity on their approach to learning, instructor misperceptions about the impact of this form of learning, the presence of many unreported disabilities, and the many different ways in which students used the system.


2018 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 424-431
Author(s):  
Fredi E. Palominos ◽  
Seomara K. Palominos ◽  
Claudia A. Durán ◽  
Felisa M. Córdova ◽  
Hernán Díaz

Author(s):  
Rafi Eka Wijaya ◽  
Mustaji Mustaji ◽  
Hari Sugiharto

This study aims to analyze the development of mobile learning in learning media to improve digital literacy and student learning outcomes in physics subjects. The method used in writing this systematic literature review is to search for the literature using a database on Google Scholar. The results of the study show that the use of mobile learning in student learning can be used as a learning support tool, media and learning resource and can be applied at the student level. The benefits of using mobile learning in learning are that it can facilitate the teaching and learning process both in the classroom and outside the classroom, attract students' attention and can generate enthusiasm and motivation in learning so that the material being delivered can be conveyed properly and can be understood by students, besides another benefit of using mobile learning is that it can support students towards independent learning. The development of mobile learning as a learning medium has been carried out by several researchers, who develop mobile learning. The results of the development carried out indicate that the media developed is more likely to focus on the teaching material only. Mobile learning developed is focused as a means of practicing working on questions that can provide various types of questions that are varied and challenging.


Author(s):  
Susan Vajoczki ◽  
Susan Watt

This case examines the incremental introduction of lecture-capture as a learning technology at a research-intensive university with the goal of addressing issues created by increases in both undergraduate enrolments and disability accommodation needs. This process began with podcasting lectures, leading ultimately to a lecture capture system with closed captioning. At each step, the changes were evaluated in terms of their impact on student learning, acceptability to students and faculty, and application to different disciplines. This evidence-based approach is in keeping with the research culture of the academy and has been helpful in advocating for budgetary support and encouraging faculty participation. As a result of this project, the authors unexpectedly gained substantial knowledge about the complexity of students’ lives, the impact of that complexity on their approach to learning, instructor misperceptions about the impact of this form of learning, the presence of many unreported disabilities, and the many different ways in which students used the system.


Author(s):  
Tiffany Bourelle ◽  
Beth L. Hewett

This chapter addresses practical strategies for training teachers to teach multimodal composition in online courses. Specifically, trainers should focus on at least four skill sets: developing and scaffolding multimodal assignments; creating multimodal instructional tools; incorporating technology labs within the curriculum; and adopting and adapting the multimodal ePortfolio as a reflective document for showcasing student learning. Teachers particularly benefit from these skill sets, which enable them to guide students in acquiring such multimodal literacies as learning to design rhetorically effective multimodal projects for various audiences and purposes. The chapter offers theoretical and practical advice for trainers where the instruction will occur in online settings as well as the training itself. This advice also is useful for teachers of face-to-face (onsite) multimodal courses when using a robust learning management system (LMS) for student support.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document