Remove Creative Commons Remove Effectiveness Remove Photo Remove TechSmith
article thumbnail

Ten Ways to Use Video in the Classroom

TechSmith Camtasia

It’s back-to-school season for most educators and this year, the TechSmith Education team is writing a series of blog posts with some ideas for the classroom. It’s catching on as a way to begin working more effectively with students and it can be a great goal to have in place as you begin exploring using video. Flip a Lesson.

Classroom 108
article thumbnail

Helping Students Find Identity Through Student Created Video

TechSmith Camtasia

Because we could all connect to the same school BYOD WiFi network, we used TechSmith Fuse to deliver media. We added media to the clip bin and then dragged it into place, where we trimmed it as necessary and added effects. We used Creative Commons photos to fill in the gaps of photos that we didn’t have.

Video 40
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Teaching with Screencasts and Rapid Prototyping

TechSmith Camtasia

Rather than writing out entire documents and refreshing the browser to see the effect, I start by prototyping in services like CodePen or jsFiddle. When you’re learning something new, you have a lessened ability to think creatively, problem solve, or abstract. How do you encourage students to be creative in their learning?

article thumbnail

13 Tips for Recording Your iPhone, iPad, or iPod

TechSmith Camtasia

It’s just a matter of plugging your iOS 8 device into a Mac running Yosemite and then firing up a tool like Camtasia for Mac or TechSmith AppShow. TechSmith AppShow, Camtasia for Mac, or QuickTime), the status bar changes. Recording in a clothes closet is also effective. Incompetech (Creative Commons – attribution).

iPhone 112