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Video in Higher Education

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VIDEO IN HIGHER EDUCATION Clive Young Nataša Perovic Digital Education UCL - University College London
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Page 1: Video in Higher Education

VIDEO IN HIGHER EDUCATIONClive YoungNataša Perovic

Digital EducationUCL - University College London

Page 2: Video in Higher Education

Clive and Nataša’s background

• Advisory Team, Digital Education

• Video projects and interest groups

Page 3: Video in Higher Education

Context

• Est.1826 (1st in London)• One of top 10 global universities• Research intensive • 12000 staff• Multidisciplinary• Growing fast

Page 4: Video in Higher Education

“As we become increasingly accustomed to using video in every aspect of our daily lives, students and educators expect to encounter video in every step of the educational process, and recognize the importance of digital and video literacy for success beyond the campus”. Kaltura 2016

Page 5: Video in Higher Education

Video both expected and ‘accepted’

Page 6: Video in Higher Education

Media in 2016-21 UCL Education Strategy

Page 7: Video in Higher Education

Importance of lecture recording at UCL

• Lecture recording for eight years

• Echo360 (“Lecturecast”)• 123 spaces• 15-20% of lectures recorded• Never compulsory just

available (…but….) STUDENTS

DEMAND IT!

Page 8: Video in Higher Education

Lecture capture ‘mainstream’ in UK

Echo360 23%Panopto 45%

(UCISA 2016)

Page 9: Video in Higher Education

1. perpetuates an outdated and discredited passive learning experience (the classroom lecture).2. does not engage the student.3. traditional lectures aren’t designed for online delivery.4. it diverts resources

Why?

Page 10: Video in Higher Education

The uninspired label “lecture capture,” fails to convey the disruptive potential of this tool

Janet Russell, September 2012Georgetown U Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship

Page 11: Video in Higher Education

“We have always thought of lecture capture as a way of changing pedagogic practice”

Jason NortonUCL Digital Education

Services Manager

The pedagogical secrets of Lecturecast

LECTURECAST FULL OF PEDAGOGICALGOODNESS

Page 12: Video in Higher Education

transforms an ephemeral event into a learning object

Clarification

Consolidation

Time

Views

Event Exam

• Access – own devices• Choice – on-demand, search• Control – start, stop, pause, review

How do students actually use recordings?

Page 13: Video in Higher Education

How do students actually use recordings?

• Selective view “hot spots”• Capture of subject

terminology • Note-taking a high priority• Supplementary to lectures• Re-experience, not just re-

cap• Assessment is a key

motivator

Page 14: Video in Higher Education

Helps faculty engage with video

• Builds media familiarity, capacity & activity• Grows interest from staff (…beyond lectures)

• Encourages use of VLE – important side effect!

Page 15: Video in Higher Education

Leading to growing use of…

Page 16: Video in Higher Education

How common is flipping?

Flipped classrooms are becoming a

widely used form of pedagogy

(53%). KALTURA 2016

Page 17: Video in Higher Education

Echo360 Personal capture• Lecturer as producer - not event-driven• easy-to-use narrated screen captures YouTube video • Lecturer as curator – needs researchOpen Educational Resources• Shared video – early days though

But more pedagogically demanding

Video for flipping

Page 18: Video in Higher Education

http://lecturecast.ucl.ac.uk:8080/ess/echo/presentation/adc1491d-6554-49fc-a595-74a9093a3be5

Page 19: Video in Higher Education

Getting ever more sophisticated…

Briefing + task online

Page 20: Video in Higher Education

Getting ever more sophisticated…

Analysis of responses + continuation in class

Page 21: Video in Higher Education

Flipping Ideas• Prepare or motivate• Elaborate on and further explain• Recall and integrate• Lead-in to an assignment• Learning guidance and strategies• Content to encourage analysis

Even more ideas• dial-e designs (JISC)

….and there’s more….

Page 22: Video in Higher Education

Acquisition

Investigation

Production

Practice

Collaboration

Discussion

Adding video to learning design (ABC workshop)

Page 23: Video in Higher Education

ABC curriculum design

Page 24: Video in Higher Education

Examples Acquisition

Page 25: Video in Higher Education

Discussion

Acquisition

Production

Examples

Practice

Page 26: Video in Higher Education

Assessment and feedback

http://www.cetl.org.uk/learning/neonatal/unit_2e/player.html

Production

Practice

Page 27: Video in Higher Education

Assessment and feedback

http://www.cetl.org.uk/learning/BP_Korotkoff_sounds/player.html

Production

Practice

Page 29: Video in Higher Education

Showcase and promote research - interviews

Many faces of dementia MOOChttps://www.dementiablog.org/the-many-faces-of-dementia/www.futurelearn.com/courses/faces-of-dementia.

Discussion

Acquisition

Page 30: Video in Higher Education

“The use of video at UCL is about transitioning to the future”

Dr Graham RobertsUCL Computer Science

Becoming mainstream

MIT 90s transformational model

http://iltinfe.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/000897_managing_it-a_planning_tool_for_senior_managers.pdf

Page 31: Video in Higher Education

http://www.flickr.com/photos/wfryer/1342355056/

Mainstream means….

Page 32: Video in Higher Education

More and different people involved

“The characteristics of late adopters are profoundly different from those of early adopters” (McKenzie 1999)

•Realise what worked for pioneers does not work for the later groups•New barriers will emerge (e.g. skills, funding)•Rebuild systems and processes...

Page 33: Video in Higher Education

Role of the student has changed• Sit back film and TV• Sit forward internet video• Stand up producers and ‘social video’

• New modes of assessment

“72% are using video for student assignments, and 10% of respondents say more than half of students actively create video”. KALTURA 2016

Beyond mainstream - students as producers

Page 34: Video in Higher Education

UCL Integration projects

• Computer Science• Anthropology• UCL Doctoral School

Trending @ UCL• Programming• Adobe suite• Web design/development• Film and Photography• Office• Mac• 3D Animation & modelling• Microsoft• Management and Leadership

Digital capabilities

Page 35: Video in Higher Education

Kaltura report 2015• easy-to-use tools for video capture (79%) • integration with VLE (72%)• simple workflows to publish videos (61%)• a centralized video system (52%)

UCL Media Manifesto 2015“To unlock this potential staff and students need easy-to-use tools for video production and simple workflows to publish media to a centralised system for delivery for example via Moodle.”

New systems

Page 36: Video in Higher Education

• MediaCentral - central media server

• Online and hands-on training environment• Easy access to support by specialists• Loan equipment ‘prosumer’ quality • Mini-studio ‘media rooms’ distributed DIY suite • High-end studio space, supported/bookable.• Media user group/special interest group• Programme of evaluation

2016 “Manifesto” in progress

Page 37: Video in Higher Education

“It is not easy to do but it shouldn't bar you from having a go, and I think you learn by doing and you learn iteratively in making video and you learn alongside students.

Dr John PotterEducation and New MediaUCL Institute of Education

To conclude


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