Thanks to the foresight of Frank Walsh, who taped his daughter Meagan’s IP team that opened the four presentations on May 27, 2009, we have one complete video, sight and sound, compressed, rendered, and uploaded to Mr. Walsh’s Viddler account. He did all of this within and posted it to his blog within 24 hours–talk about a very tech savvy parent (I want to hire him to film and upload next year, but I doubt I could afford his per diem). You can read about IP from a parent’s perspective, and undoubtedly enjoy An Era on Air’s presentation. Don’t miss the pictures in Walsh’s gallery.
Guest Blogger: William Kennington, junior, SHS
Cross-posted on PA DEN
Last week, on May 27, 2009, four groups at Salisbury High School in Allentown, PA presented their Integrated Project. IP is year-long endeavor for students who enroll in the courses of AP US History and Honors English 11. IP is a research-based project that incorporates a final multi-media presentation as well as a stage production that lasts for 45 minutes. We streamed our presentations using two backchannels, one focused on the stage and one on the projector screen. We had no problems streaming it, but the recorded videos were corrupt. You can still watch the two separate stream as they were the day we went live, but the downloaded video was buggy. Therefore, a compiled version of the presentation can not be made at this time, but we are working with ustream to resolve this issue. I have tried converting the presentation thus far with vixy.net, zamzar.com, ffmpeg, adobe media encoder, vlc, and other free media encoders. Ustream has been working on a way to convert their video directly through their website, but this feature is still unfinished and unavailable. Hopefully once this feature is implemented (or when we find a way to convert the video), we should be ready to release the compiled video for each of the four IP presentations. We used Discoverystreaming videos in creating our factual and counterfactual histories, so when we get this problem fixed, we can show you how factual Discoverystreaming videos can be used to make counterfactual scenariors look real.
Interesting and timely, Mogulus, which has often been a go-to choice, has changed its name and website. Mogulus, now Livestream, always supported multi-camera streaming but didn’t have have high quality resolution, but with the difficulties we have encountered, we might switch to Livestream. From their newsletter, here’s what’s new with Livestream:
Recently we changed our name from Mogulus to Livestream, and you can find us at our new home at www.livestream.com. As much as we loved our old name, it was time for a change that reflects our growth and more clearly communicates what we do. We hope you like “Livestream” as much as we do.
Along with the new brand and domain come a re-designed website, and most importantly for you, another simple way to broadcast from the Livestream website.
This new tool offers instant streaming from any page on our website. Just click the red ‘Broadcast Now’ button or go to your ‘My Account’ section.
Go live with one click from almost any webcam or camcorder, and chat or Twitter to promote your channel, all right within the application.
Of course you can still use Procaster (our downloadable desktop application) for the highest possible quality, but for instant no-fuss streaming, the new broadcaster is great.
Now that we’ve changed, what do you need to do?
In short, nothing!
Your channel pages and embedded players will continue to function just as they did before. You may want to update any links to your channel page (i.e. change from “www.mogulus.com/yourchannel” to “www.livestream.com/yourchannel”), but the old links will still work even if you don’t get around to it.
If you’re using the old logo, we’d appreciate it if you update it to the new Livestream logo. You can download it here.
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Nothing beats attending a performance live, but is time, space, and conflicts create issues for you, then attending virtually is a great option. For our IP presentations, my colleague, friend, fellow STAR DEN, and now Instructional Coach (next year’s dream job) and IP partner for over a decade, Jen Brinson and I decided to run a backchannel for the presentations. I had run backchannels before at conferences, presentations, and most recently in my classroom for students who were absent and for review purposes. My go-to platform of choice has always been Ustream.tv, although I hold similar accounts in other Web 2.0 offerings as well. The idea was the easy part; executing two-camera channels was an llama of a different color. So, I went to my go-to student, William Kennington, a great example of Tapscott’s Grown Up Digital Net Generation. Kennington was convinced that Ustream.tv could handle multiple channels; I knew Mogulus (now Livestream, but more about that later) could, but had my doubts about the former. Trust William; Ustream could and did handle the two-channel set up, and he also found a way to use CFF Macs to pull in the individual teams’ home laptop videos. We were glad to go with Ustream, because the streaming resolution and end-output quality when archived have always been superior.
On May 27, 2009, when this year’s IP debuted, two students, Megan Heverly and Mark Attilio ran the backchannels, starting, ending, saving, and archiving each team’s two-channel streams for posterity. They were my link to the streams, since I was, as always, mutitasking. Brinson anchored the streaming the whole day, since she had formulated her defense questions for the teams in advance, and was our connection with our guest viewers, which included her family in NC and her Canadian colleagues in her online course with Discovery Education/Wilkes University, Salisbury Middle School history classes, and Mrs. Meholic’s math classes. At one point, Brinson said we had 21 site guests. Not bad at all for IPs maiden voyage into virtual productions.
The question that Brinson and I continue to be bombarded with is when will the presentation be posted. Here’s the timetable. William is giving the teams their stage footage to mix and edit with videos/slides tomorrow. Thursday is binder due date, and that includes a mixed final video. At that point, I will compress each video, render it, and upload it. Each video takes about a half a day from start to finish for embeddable code for online posting. At that point we will post to our blogs: Changing Connections, RJ Stangherlin SHS, Learning Curve, PA DEN, Education, Technology, and Fun blogs. I am guessing that a week from this Thursday you can start checking our blogs. If you are part of our social networks (Brinson’s and mine overlap to a point), you can follow our tweets. We’ll keep you posted for when the students amazing presentations can be virtually yours. IP Multimedia Stage Presentation Education Technology Integrated Project Turbo Tagger
So why do I mention Clustrmaps if that isn’t specifically today’s challenge? Quite simply, to remind you that it isn’t just the people in your state, country, or even continent that are going to find your content. When you publish your thoughts and ideas on your blog, you are publishing for a global audience. It’s entirely possible, and even likely, that you are getting visitors from around the world without you even realizing it. So shouldn’t we be making our content as accessible as possible?Teach42
As our school district’s community of learners grows, we add a rich diversity of readers, collaborators, and creators. So, shouldn’t we find out where our readers are? Clustrmaps is an easy visual way to aggregate your data. If you want more data, try Google Analytics. I’ve added both of these stat trackers to my blogs. Another great tool is Google Translate; anyone can now read my blog in their native language. As a teaching tool for ESL students, this device has unlimited uses and can be applied to a wiki as well. A final great tool is Reblog from Zamanta. By posting using this tool, the Reblog icon will be added to my blog, making it really easy for someone to grab a quotation my blog and “reblog” it on theirs, adding associated links, photos, articles, tags and more. Best of all, you can add Zamanta to Firefox (or if anyone still uses it, IE 7). Not exactly TM or IM, but a faster better way to blog.