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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. Head on over to the TechSmith Education page for more stories on how to create videos and for free software trials. Or, let’s think bigger: student film festival.

Classroom 108
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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 used Creative Commons photos to fill in the gaps of photos that we didn’t have. We used search.creativecommons.org to find these photos that weren’t protected by a standard copyright.

Video 40
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Teaching with Screencasts and Rapid Prototyping

TechSmith Camtasia

When you’re learning something new, you have a lessened ability to think creatively, problem solve, or abstract. It’s important to teach syntax standards and proper formatting, but when I have them experimenting with ideas, the structure of the whole document isn’t nearly as important.

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Building a Middle School Flipped Classroom

TechSmith Camtasia

While this isn’t the first piece of software to report this, it is the first type I have found (that is teacher-budget-friendly) that reports it in such an easy-to-use format. The featured image for this post is creative commons licensed ( BY-NC-SA ) flickr photo shared by ptrlx. For Educators'

Classroom 110