After earning this badge, you will be able to
A screencast is a digital recording of computer screen output, usually with voice narration. The producer's image may also be captured while recording and later displayed in a box on the screen.
Users of full-featured software can overlay text, arrows, and call-outs; highlight click locations; zoom in; and embed interactive quizzes.
With this kind of tool teachers can record a presentation, software demonstration, website introduction, document analysis, or video conference. Capture anything that appears on the screen at any time:
Instructors use screencast videos to review challenging concepts, provide students with feedback, produce skill tutorials, teach procedures, and answer frequently asked questions. Lecture Capture is a related concept. It involves recording the professor's activities for entire class sessions - what they say, what appears on the screen, and (possibly) video of what they are doing.
Instructors are not the only ones who use screencasts. Students also create them to show what they have learned. Even game enthusiasts use screencasts to share successes, tips, and tricks.
The other side of these video productions is that many of the tutorial videos that people consume on YouTube are screencasts. We use them to learn all kinds of technology skills. Sharing your screencast videos can help your students and, very likely, people you don't even know!
READ
WATCH
Reflect on what you learned and make some notes for later writing. These prompts may help:
For this badge, your task is to create a narrated 2-4 minute screencast "microlecture" that you could use in a course in your discipline.
Part A — SCRIPT / PREP / LEARN
Part B — RECORD / EDIT / EXPORT
Part C — EXPLAIN
Write a short paragraph (50-100 words) that tells how you would expect to use the video.
Write a reflection of at least 250 words.
Include the following in your reflection:
A specific reference to one of the articles you read or videos you watched
Connections - relate your learning for this badge to your own teaching & learning, both past experience and future plans
Link - at least one other resource, article, website, etc.
Media - at least one embedded image or video (include the source).
These prompts may help: