Monday, March 05, 2012
Video is KING in distance education
With the field of Distance Education exploding due to the maturation of the Internet, it’s no wonder more good quality free academic content is finding its way on the web. Here’s a great example that I just learned about from Dr. James Harris at the University of Leeds in England. It’s called The Faculties and it contains video snipits of senior-level highschool (or junior-level university) lectures spanning several fields including Biology, Chemistry, English, History, Math, and Psychology. To date, they have produced over 360 videos with a promise of more to follow. If you are not in the business of distance education this repository remains useful. Instructors can request downloads of the videos so that they can be played for students even in classrooms that are not wired for the Internet.
This semester I am teaching a second year chemistry course via distance and I have some students in the class that have asked me if I could provide links to some useful videos on specific topics. Naturally, I am always on the lookout for them so I was very excited to learn about The Faculties. I’ve watched about a dozen videos so far and they are very good. There is definitively something for everyone in this repository and you can stay up-to-date on the progress in building this repository via Twitter (@thefaculties). Have a look at some of the videos and let us know what you think. Do you know of other similar free video repositories other than the standard YouTube search? If so, let us know by leaving a comment below.
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For the last two years, I have been involved with the development of a video and multimedia production company (a non-profit) that will provide originally-produced, high quality, content-rich videos for university humanities programs. To date, we are developing media for Asian Studies Programs. These videos will not be free online, but made available to teachers and students through their schools who subscribe to our service. Given the huge expense of production, intellectual property issues and licensing that was required for production, this is the way we have to deliver the content. Similar to ArtStor. Stay tuned....
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