9. Where? In Your YouTube Channel !
➔ Here’s mine:
https://www.youtube.com/user/e
lemenous
➔ Is your school using Google
Apps for Education? Has your
GAFE admin turned on
YouTube for teachers and/or
students?
➔ If not, you can create a personal
Google Account and that will
give you access to YouTube.
➔ If you have a Google Account,
go to YouTube and sign in with
that account information to
connect your Google Account to
YouTube. More about signing
up here.
➔ For support, check out these
getting started videos from
YouTube’s Help channel.
11. Other Methods and Tools
➔ Web Sites
◆ Animoto
◆ VoiceThread
◆ WeVideo
➔ Record into YouTube
➔ Google Hangouts on Air
➔ Screencasting
◆ Quicktime
◆ Camtasia
◆ Screenr
◆ Jing
◆ Screencast-O-Matic
◆ Hangouts on Air
18. Your Homework: Upload By Email
1. Take out your mobile device or use Photobooth on a Mac.
2. Capture a video clip by interviewing a friend for a minute or
two.
a. Use this prompt: What have you learned so far at CBI?
3. Email it to: 62497548264@mms.youtube.com
4. Visit my channel to see the results:
http://youtube.com/elemenous
19. Did You Know?
Online editing capabilities in YouTube continue to expand.
(Go to your channel>video manager and select a video to edit.)
➔ Add clickable annotations and speech bubbles to any video that you
upload
➔ Autocorrect color, add color filters, and stabilize video images
➔ Blur faces
➔ Add copyright friendly audio
➔ Upload caption files or transcripts
More robust editing capabilities are available in the online YouTube editor as
well:
http://www.youtube.com/editor
22. Curating: Search Effectively
➔ Use the browse and search functionality of YouTube to find
channels and individual videos.
➔ Use the Filters button to refine your query.
➔ Create playlists for units that you teach. Set them up ahead of time
or post-production. You can also create them on the fly.
➔ Give links to playlists to students to supplement classroom
materials.
➔ Collect videos created by students to show to parents. You can use
private links.
23. Where Do You Find Content?
Subscribe to channels. A few suggestions:
➔ Edutopia
➔ Google Science Fair
➔ NASA
➔ Library of Congress
➔ Common Sense Educators
➔ Buck Institute
➔ EdSurge
25. Stop and play around
with search in
YouTube. Add a few
videos to a playlist.
26. Specific Instructional Uses
➔ Flipping the classroom
(or flip the PD or faculty
meeting)
➔ Language practice
➔ Assessments and
reflections
➔ Independent study
➔ Writing Prompts
➔ Field trip documentation
➔ Choose Your Own
Adventure activities
➔ Screencasts
➔ Show a video in a
Hangout
➔ Additional ideas from
Tami Brass
33. Other Useful YouTube Links
Creator Hub
Creator Hub - Education
Audio Library
Video Editor
TestTube
YouTube blog
YouTube Help Center
YouTube Creators blog
YouTube Edu
YouTube Teachers
34. Resources
➔ YouTube Help Center
➔ YouTube EDU on G+:
https://plus.google.com/+YouTu
beEDU/posts
➔ Slides : http://bit.ly/grayyoutube
➔ Handout:
https://tackk.com/diyyoutube
➔ List of Educational YouTube
Videos
➔ Google Custom Search Engine:
http://goo.gl/RoiRi
➔ YouTube Diigo Group:
http://goo.gl/xCgSO
Here are some resoures that may be of use to you. The last five links are resources I’ve created.
Everyone is getting in on the YouTube action.
Everyone is getting in on the YouTube action.
We’re focusing on three components to using YouTube effectively in schools today.
No longer do we need huge, professional cameras to create. Everyone is their own documentarian.
Upload button
Video creation is increasingly web-based and there are many apps (iOS, Android, and web) that produce video.
Educators are loving Google Hangouts on Air which allow one to broadcast to a YouTube channel. This is a sample from a project I did with Cisco’s GETIdeas.
Here are a few apps that you may want to check out.
Here’s a homework assignment for you during this conference. People at home can try this out, too.
YouTube provides some great editing tools.
Let’s take a look at what this looks like.
The first three are obvious or we’ve covered already. I want to discuss briefly other things that you can do. First, we need to talk about curating in YouTube.
You can also browse for videos by clicking on suggestions, visiting favorite channels, or looking at what your friends have subscribed to.
Here are a few recommended channels. Look at my channel for more suggestions.
You need to manage your videos, ones you created and those that you found, by maintaining playlists.
Here are some ideas for using video in your classroom. What other ideas do you have?
Here is how you can use a video and a Google Form with your students.
TeachHub
Choose Your Own Adventure
Your school should also increase its web presence by hosting a channel. Here are some examples.
Check out this directory I found today.
If you are really into YouTube, here are some supplementary resources that you may want to check out.
Here are some resources that may be of use to you. The last five links are resources I’ve created.
If you have questions, please feel free to contact me