Padlet, an Online “Bulletin Board” for Collaborative Class Projects

I am always interested in finding new instruments to use in student generated content projects.  Padlet is a device-neutral application that allows the displaying of information on any topic.  It can be used like a traditional bulletin board or for such activities as blogging, publishing podcasts or videos, bookmarking, making brochures and posters or as the base of a discussion board.   You can use Padlet as a publishing tool or just as a private notes app. This is a great application because it allows the collaboration of multiple people adding content to a padlet. Another nice touch is that work is autosaved as it is generated so work is not lost when students forget to save as can happen in some wikis.

You can choose who sees your padlets from the general public to just members of a class or even making your padlet completely private for your eyes only.  In a collaboration application, you determine the level of access by assigning individuals read only, read-write, moderator or administrative access.  Padlets can be collaborated on by a single class, multiple classes within the same institution or by classes at multiple institutions.  How fun would it be to have your class interact with experts via a padlet mechanism?  The uses for this app are endless.  Here is a link to an article on using Padlet for blogging in the classroom.

Some of the things you can include in a padlet are documents, images, hyperlinks, audio and video files. Files can be uploaded from a computer or mobile devices, and content from the web such as a YouTube video can be embedded into your padlet.  In turn, you can embed padlets into webpages, blogs or an LMS; export them as pdf files, images or a host of other files; or distribute them the old-fashioned way by printing them.

Padlet is available for use in a browser, and there are apps available for iOS, Android and Kindle devices.  There is a basic free padlet account available which allows you to have three operating padlets, however,  uploaded files must not be larger than 10 MB.  The basic plan is not a trial, but rather, an account that does not expire.  Padlet Pro is $8.25/month (or $99/year) with unlimited padlets and upload available for files up to 250 MB in size.  On the free plan, you can delete a padlet you no longer need to start a new one to keep within the three padlet limit.  For a collaborative project,  you can generate one padlet to be used by everyone in the class.    If you refer others who then sign up for a padlet account, you will be given an additional padlet for every three people who join from your referral.  If you are interested in signing up for a free account, you can help me out by using my referral link.

An Easy to Use App to Create e-Books

I have used a student-generated content project in my CH 361 Energy, Resources and the Environment class for quite a number of years.  In this class, we do not use a commercial textbook, but rather, students generate the e-textbook used.  This is done using a wiki platform.  The way the project works is that each class edits what has been previously written, updates the data and adds new sections.  Since the course is taught in alternating years, this keeps the textbook relatively current on a topic that is extremely fluid.  Although a wiki application works quite well for my purposes, it is a little limiting in the respect that the “book” is only available for reading online.

I am always looking for ways to improve the projects I use and found an app called Book Creator which allows you to add text, images, audio, and video to generate e-books.  Unlike applications such as i-Books Author, it is easy enough for anyone to use. It can be used by teachers to generate classroom resources, by students for creative projects or by anyone who wants to create an e-book. Here are some of the types of things this app could be used for:

  • instruction manuals
  • digital portfolios
  • lab notebooks
  • travel journals
  • textbooks
  • picture books
  • group creative writing books
  • the modern scrapbook
  • a recipe cookbook

I am sure there are a plethora of other applications for this app.  Although Book Creator was originally designed as an iPad app, it is now available as a web app as well.  When you are done creating your masterpiece, you can publish it for general distribution as an e-pub, an i-Book or a pdf document.  e-Pub is a universal format that can be read on any platform while i-Books are Apple specific.  The pdf is universal, but if the book has audio or video clips, they will not be incorporated into the final published form and would need to be made available to your audience through the web or other distribution mechanism.

Book Creator allows a teacher to generate a library that contains up to 40 books for free.  There are paid accounts that allow multiple libraries and larger numbers of books, but for many classroom applications, the free account is sufficient.  You do not have to be an actual teacher to sign up for an account and generate e-books.  Students can have individual accounts, but I haven’t explored that feature.  I am going to have students use this app in their capstone laboratory experience course next year for generating electronic laboratory notebooks.

You can learn more about Book Creator at  https://bookcreator.com/

Using Video Documentary Creation in the Science Classroom

A number of my classes have a significant project-based learning (PBL) component.  All of my classes are upper division Chemistry courses except for one, General Science, a liberal arts core course for students in the University’s Honors Program.  I team with an Earth Science colleague to teach the third term of this year long sequence course.  The students in our class are not science majors, rather, most are majoring in the arts, humanities, social sciences or education.  photographerWhile we teach some physics, chemistry, earth and environmental science through the topic of energy and energy resources, much of the students’ in depth learning comes from researching an energy topic of current interest and creating a video documentary about it.  The documentaries are used for class learning and are also presented in a public screening during Western Oregon University’s Academic Excellence Showcase. The project is a rather daunting one for our students as we are on the 10-week instructional quarter system, and in reality, they only have about 6 weeks from the time they start their research until the date of the Showcase event.  We have found over six years of using this instructional approach that production pairs work most effectively. There just is not enough time for single students to complete the work while larger groups invariably result in unequal divisions of labor.

Video production is writing in disguise, a term paper on steroids if you will.  Whereas a term paper is a very individual assignment written by a student and typically only shared with an instructor, the videos are writing shared with many people.  The project has a number of stages, and each provides students with the opportunity to learn some academically useful skills and improve their collaboration skills.  The stages are:

  1. Research
  2. Script Writing/Storyboarding
  3. Audio Recording
  4. Video Editing
  5. Proceedings Abstract Writing
  6. Presentation

Research

The research portion of the project is very similar to what a student does for a typical term paper.  However, during this phase, students are not just learning about their topics and collecting references.  They are also looking for imagery and video clips that they might be able to use.  We use this stage to teach about copyright and the Creative Commons.  If the students find non-Creative Commons pictures or video clips they would like to use, they learn how to seek the permission of the copyright holders to incorporate the materials into their projects.  We also provide a library of video clips we have recorded for them to use and royalty free materials.  Another skill we teach is how to locate scientific information and how to determine the validity of what they find.

Since this is a collaboration between two students, we provide them with a shared folder on the university network for storing files.  We have developed a class wiki site (hosted by PBworks), and each production team has a group of pages for storing research, composing their abstracts and developing the documentary storyboard.  The wiki serves two purposes.  It allows both members of the production team to add and edit materials (also members of other teams can drop anything they find that might be of use onto another team’s wiki space), and it allows the instructors to monitor each team’s progress to ensure they are keeping on schedule and make comments and suggestions.

Storyboarding

Once the students have gotten a significant amount of their research done, they develop a storyboard for the project.  For our purposes, a storyboard consists of a two column table with rows for each of the “scenes” in the video.  One column contains notations of the visual materials that will be on the video track, and the second column contains the audio (narration, music, sound effects) that will accompany those visuals on the audio track.  This is where the students write their narration script.   All of this is done on the wiki so we can read the scripts as they develop.

Recording the Narration

Once the script is written, students record their narration.  We use Audacity, a free audio recording software package, available for both Wiindows and Mac which does not have a huge learning curve.

Video Editing

Once the narrative recording is completed, it is laid down as the audio track to start the video editing process.  The visual track is then constructed with still graphics, video clips, transitions, titles, etc.  We use Adobe Premiere Elements, available in both Windows and Mac editions, as our video editing software. This software is quite powerful for a consumer software package and does have a learning curve.  To get the students up and running, I have created a web module with screencast tutorials of all the basic features needed to create a video.  Early in the term, we familiarize the students with the software by having them create a short 1-2 minute video clip with an audio track (learning Audacity), video from stock visuals (although they can opt to shoot their own), transitions and titles.  We devote several class/lab sessions to the actual video editing of the documentary project so I can trouble shoot and help with technical aspects.

Proceedings Abstracts

Western Oregon University allocates one day each spring (typically the Thursday after Memorial Day) for students to present academic work in a professional meeting environment which is open to all segments of the university community as well as the public at large.  This is the forum through which our senior Chemistry majors present their seminars, and the students in our General Science class show their videos.  A Proceedings with abstracts of all the presentations is published for the event.  The unfortunate part of the abstract writing exercise is that the deadline for abstract submission occurs before the students have completed their narrative due to the time frame needed to compile and print the abstract volume.  We teach about abstract writing, the students collaboratively write their abstracts within the wiki, and then we do group editing during a class session.

Presentation

When the Academic Excellence Showcase day comes, the students are present for the public screening of their videos.  Each pair of producers sit in directors chairs at the front of the auditorium and introduce their video, tell why they chose their topic and share something interesting that they learned during the research process.  After the videos are shown, they entertain questions from the audience.  This process can be a bit daunting to our students who are often freshman and sophomores as the lecture hall in which the screenings occur is often filled to standing room capacity (70 or more).

Miscellaneous Comments

We do devote a lot of class time to these projects so you may wonder how we cover the course content.  The theory behind project-based learning is that students learn more about a subject if they develop their own knowledge through an in depth study of a particular topical area than by a traditional overview of a subject.  Our students learn from their own research topic as well as from the range of topics covered in their classmates videos.  The members of the class watch and critique the other students videos multiple times, and the material from these topics is queried on the final exam.  During the term, we do cover basic physics, chemistry and earth science concepts as well as topics not explored in a given year’s video productions.  Much of the course content is delivered using a flipped classroom style methodology where students watch video lectures and complete web modules I have generated, watch videos on alternative energy topics, watch videos from previous years classes, read articles on energy innovations, conduct hands-on lab exercises, etc. We have conducted surveys of our students over the years we have been teaching this class, and the majority of the students rate their class experience favorably.  Some reoccuring themes we see in the surveys are that the students were afraid of the project because they came into the class with few of the technological skills needed for making a video; the students liked taking responsibility for their own learning; they were proud of what they accomplished and would recommend the class to others.  I am old fashioned… I believe that self-esteem and confidence comes from tackling challenges, learning from mistakes, and ultimately accomplishing a goal.  Our students, who are not going to be scientists and may even be “afraid” of science, leave our class confident that they can research a scientific topic and learn what they need to know to be an informed citizen.  This is my goal for these students!

Six years ago, Philip Wade, whose specialization is Earth Science education, and I undertook this as an investigation to see how alternative learning experiences can be used in the university classroom, and we are very pleased with the results.  It takes much more effort to teach the class in this manner than if we used a traditional lecture approach.  We have presented our findings via poster and oral presentations at several meetings of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) and were invited to write a chapter, “Using Video Projects in the Science Classroom”, in the monograph New Trends in Earth Science Outreach and Engagement, Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research published (December 2013) by Springer based on one of our oral presentations.  In addition, a number of our student videos have been selected each of the last two years for showing along side commercial productions as part of the AGU Cinema held during the AGU fall meeting in San Francisco.  We plan to submit entries this summer from this year’s class for consideration for next December’s Cinema.

It is true that our students’ videos are not technically perfect.  There is just not sufficient time to mix the audio and to get the levels even throughout the production and to fix other imperfections.  Oh, what I would give for a 15-week semester course!  We give our students freedom to tell their stories however they wish.  While most use a “Ken Burns” style, we have had students write a play and do the acting, write their own music , make their own models, etc.  I am surprised we haven’t seen a “rap” version yet…we do encourage them to be creative! Here are some examples of this year’s videos (note that each video begins with about 10 seconds of a leader so the video does not begin abruptly at the screening).  I’d love to see any comments or suggestions you have.

Coal

An excellent student effort


Cracking the Case on Fracking

This is an interesting way of telling a story.  It was “performed” and filmed by the two students.  The background image is a tree trunk section showing the growth rings in case you are wondering.


The Ocean: Energy in Waves

This one contains some very nice imagery


Black Gold – Texas Tea

A well done look at petroleum


One Man’s Trash is Another Man’s Fuel

This video takes you to an energy generating facility not far from the university’s campus

iThoughts …Get It While It’s Hot!

I have been playing around with mind mapping tools lately and found out that an app I really like has been updated and is on sale. iThoughts-iPad iThoughts HD, a great iPad mind mapping tool, has been totally rewritten from the ground up and was released May 13 with a new name, iThoughts for iOS 7 which is universal for both the iPhone and iPad.  Since this release is essentially a new app, if you already own iThoughts HD, you will need to purchase it again.  However, for a limited time it is available for $1.99 in the iOS App Store which is 80% off the regular price.

In addition to the mobile app, there is a companion application for the Mac called iThoughtsX.  iThoughtsXYou can move your maps easily between your i-devices and Mac via iCloud, Dropbox, etc. allowing you to brainstorm anywhere.  When your mind map is complete, you can export it in a variety of ways including OPML, PDF and HTML for sharing or for use with other applications.  To celebrate the launching of iThoughts for iOS 7, the Mac version is also on sale for $48 which is 20% off the normal price.  Although this might seem to be a bit expensive, computer mind mapping tools often range in price from $100-$300.

You can purchase iThoughtsX either from the developer’s (Toketaware) website or from the Mac App Store.  Want to try before you buy?  You can download a free 14 day trial for iThoughtsX from Toketaware.  iThoughtsX licensing allows the software to be installed on multiple computers as long as only one person is using it at any one time.  The developer’s website indicates that educational discounts are available upon request.   Both the mobile and Mac versions are great pieces of software although I really like the convenience of the iPad version for use anywhere an idea strikes me.

“No Courses, No Classes, No Grades – Just Learning”

This is the title of an article by Christina Farr about the project-based learning program NuVu Studio where students enrolled in the program learn by solving real world problems3d_hand_wireframe_hand.  For example, a project for one group of students was to make a  mock up of an affordable prosthetic hand.  After conducting interviews with amputees and their families, physicians, and engineers, the students designed a prosthetic device and produced it on a 3D printer.  This is an interesting, thought provoking article.