This document discusses using podcasts within higher education to share best practices in teaching and learning. It outlines how the university has created an in-house podcast over 4 seasons with 37 episodes to distribute teaching techniques and gain insights from colleagues. Production requires about 7.5 hours per episode for preparation, recording, editing, and communication. Insights from the podcast indicate topics of interest and the top 3 tips from colleagues are preparation, teacher-student relationships, and encouraging student self-activity. The goal is to better approach blended learning and asynchronous exchange around content.
3. Back to the future?!
Combining the best of both worlds:
face-to-face and distance learning
to achieve “Future Skills” (Ehlers, 2020)
within blended learning
offerings.
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4. How to teach Future Skills?
Picking up, training, reflecting and learning
from each other.
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5. PodCasting as a low-threshold learning resource…
…within further training in higher education didactics:
#1: high acceptance and use
#2: easy integration into the common media usage
#3: flexible reception within time and location
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6. Concept of Macromedia‘s didactic PodCast
Good practice as accelerator for own teaching
Making in-house competence visible
Communication channel for didactic concepts
use in variable scenarios (occasion for internal exchange)
…Content marketing & employer branding
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7. Conditions
Use of existing in-house skills: changing colleagues as experts
Communication at eye level: It is easier to accept something from a known
colleague than from outside
Gender equal choice of guests
Not live and with post-processing: promoting confidence
Compression of content and limitation of time to max. 15 min. to achieve
highest attention: PodCast as “knowledge nuggets“
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8. Recording, editing and distribution
Use of a VoIP tool („StudioLink“)
with separate audio tracks for each speaker
Editing with audio software
„Audition“ by Adobe
Hosting and distribution to
common podcast platforms
(Spotify, Apple PodCast,
Google PodCast i.a.)
by „Anchor.fm“
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9. Production expenses
Preparation time/episode (aquise, briefing, questionnaire): approx. 70 min.
Recording time/episode: approx. 45 min.
Post-production/episode (editing): approx. 270 min.
Communication (text, artwork, posting): approx. 60 min.
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445 min.
In total about 7,5 h per episode
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10. Publication and reception
Until now 4 seasons with 37 episodes have been released
Within each season publication rhythm is 14 days.
Announcement via #1 university's internal communication tool
Yammer, #2 corporate and private channels on LinkedIn and
Twitter, #3 instagram account
Monitoring of usage via Anchor.fm only provides indications,
since beyond Spotify it is not transparent which data flows back
from the other platforms.
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13. Our goal
The main aim is to distribute the PodCast within the college…
Furthermore we're also interested in what our colleagues give
across the board as central tips for successful university
teaching.
Indicator for probably high relevant topics within further didactic
training.
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14. Good practice
We talk about changing topics
of university didactic relevance.
But at the end of every conversation,
however, there is always
the same question...
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“What are your personal 3 tips
for successful teaching?“
15. What colleagues notice
#1: Preparation
#2: Teacher-student relationship
#3: Encouragement of student‘s self-activity
Even though we took almost all of the recordings under the impression of
online teaching during the Corona times, technical issues were hardly
addressed:
It's about teaching and learning and the decision how to do best; not about
digital or analog media.
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16. Take aways and outlook
Everyone thinks university didactic training is important - but only a minority
participates (because of expected effort, lack of time resources, uncertainty in the
selection of content, etc.)
Here PodCast forms a bridge to a better approach:
Integration in blended learning scenarios.
Asynchronous exchange via annotations and re-annotation of the content in the
sense of "social video learning" (Vohle & Reinmann, 2012; Vohle, 2016) as a further didactic-
methodical option
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18. Get in touch
ANDREAS HEBBEL-SEEGER a.hebbel-seeger@macromedia.de
ANNETTE STRAUSS a.strauss@macromedia.de
PODCAST https://anchor.fm/macromedia0
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19. References
Ehlers, U.-D. (2020). Future Skills. Lernen der Zukunft – Hochschule der Zukunft. Wiesbaden: Springer VS.
Vohle, F. (2016). Social Video Learning. Eine didaktische Zäsur. In A.-W. Scheer & C. Wachter (Hrsg.), Digitale
Bildungslandschaften (S. 175-185). Saarbrücken: IMC.
Vohle, F. & Reinmann, G. (2012). Förderung professioneller Unterrichtskompetenz mit digitalen Medien: Lehren
lernen durch Videoannotation. In R. Schulz-Zander, B. Eickelmann, H. Moser, H. Niesyto & P. Grell (Hrsg.), Jahrbuch
Medienpädagogik 9 (S. 413-429). Wiesbaden: Springer VS.
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