Include in your post the name of at least one podcast to which you subscribed. Describe your experience using the various search tools. Which do you prefer and why?
I have subscribed to Speaking of History. It is a podcast produced by 8th Grade History teacher Eric Langhorst. The episode that caught my eye is Podcast #184 – Creating “Common Craft” Type Videos about Historical Terms for Class. It is a “supercast” with audio, photos, and video! Lee LeFever even left a comment praising the students and Mr. Langhorst on their product.
http://speakingofhistory.blogspot.com/2009/03/podcast-184-creating-common-craft-type.html
The process I used to find this podcast was by going to EPN, Subject Specific: Social Studies, Speaking of History, and then scrolling through several episodes until I found one I thought would be useful to me and clicking on it. At first I was a little freaked out because there were probably over 20 with just today’s date. Talk about information overload. I didn’t want to subscribe to something that sent out 20 podcasts a day! Once I subscribed, I could see the actual date of posting. Whew! I think this is a great search tool and plan to use it again in the future.
I did not use iTunes to locate and subscribe to this feed, although I have used iTunes for this purpose in the past. In fact, I think that’s how I found Grammar Girl. I also downloaded from iTunes onto my iPod and burned CDs for my students a podcast called Japanese Survival Phrases before our exchange trip last summer. I was surprised at the number of educational podcasts iTunes carries.
I really like and use NetVibes. I have a tab just for podcasts on my NetVibes page and I want to keep them all there in one “file cabinet” so to speak. So I simply clicked on the orange RSS icon in the podcast I chose, copied the URL (this one is an xml, which from past experience I know works), opened my NetVibes page, clicked on my podcasts tab, and added the feed. Now I can go through all the episodes at my convenience. Can’t wait to get started!!!
http://www.netvibes.com
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Thanks for following the blog. Good luck with exploring web 2.0 and I hope you find some things you can incorporate in the classroom.
ReplyDeleteEric