Honestly, I think it is wonderful, yet I'll probably never do it in a class for 
a simple reason: My goal is to teach psychology and tools directly used in our 
discipline. While my students will know Youtube, they won't know 
Archive.org<http://Archive.org>. Would it be nice for them to learn 
Archive.org<http://Archive.org>, maybe, but is that something I should spend 
time in my psychology classes teaching? The two audio tools, plus sound cloud, 
again, are things that I don't find are part of psychology. It might be nice 
for students to learn about that, but should I spend class time teaching it? 
Should I devote myself to hours outside of class teaching it when I've got too 
few hours to teach the psychology material I need to teach? Same thing for an 
image editor, and then creating the collage there (or maybe Glogster). There 
are mass communications classes that teach the use of those kinds of tools.

But, that's not to say that I'm a luddite and don't want to use technology 
tools to create engagement. I just want to be careful about what I teach in my 
PSYCHOLOGY classes. (BTW, I know what psychology related class I might use this 
for… more on that in a minute.)

I have online discussions for some of my face to face classes. For the online 
discussions I formerly used Blackboard. But, the students hated it, I hated it… 
it wasn't a discussion in that you couldn't really see what people wrote 
without endless clicking, clicking, clicking. Never mind following the 
discussion and grading was a nightmare… but it was what we had. Then, I found 
Schoology (there are others) that have discussions set up similar to Facebook. 
All the students know Facebook's style of creating a discussion. Easy Peasy, I 
moved all my discussions over to Schoology (not to Facebook, I don't want 
Facebook making money mining student's information).

But, note I formerly used a frustrating technology on Blackboard because 
students were familiar with it and there is on-campus support for students 
having difficulty. Therefore, I have my students use a Wiki system built into 
Blackboard to construct as a team their results sections of a paper. The idea 
is for them to collaborate and learn from each other. While there is some 
learning curve to it, I see the gains for psychology as very worth it and 
collaborative writing is increasingly common in the modern office environment. 
And, note I now use an offsite system that I might have to help the students 
with a bit until they get accustomed to it. Given they are weekly discussions, 
and actually quite easy to use, I'm willing to help the rare student who needs 
it.

I use Youcanbook.me for students to easily schedule appointments with me 
(thanks Sue!). Students love it and it is easy for them. It is not dead easy 
for me, but easy enough and the gains in my time management and in students 
coming to see me is immeasurable.

The class I might use something like you propose is a course developed by a 
colleague called Musical Lyrics and Life. The idea is to take psychological 
concepts and illustrate them with song lyrics. Students get to show off their 
favorite music (as well as the instructor) while learning psychological 
concepts. In that class, taking time to learn some sound manipulation 
applications, etc. seems worthwhile because it is more directly related to the 
purpose of the class.

This is how I approach all ideas on use of technology from 'Let's jump on the 
Second Life' bandwagon to presentation software to online discussion to 
plagiarism prevention… does it fit the goals, is the learning of the tool 
burdensome for the students and/or myself, and to what degree? Will it help 
them in their career, realistically, even if not directly psychology related? I 
put that all in the equation and come out with a yes or no. Even if I think it 
is kinda the coolest thing ever, if I can't justify it, I don't do it.

I hope the feedback was helpful.

Paul

On Mar 6, 2013, at 8:04 PM, Michael Britt wrote:







I just finished putting together a little project that I think other psych 
teachers might want to use in their classes.  My goal was to better understand 
what B.F. Skinner actually said about education, free will, etc.   I put 
together a little "audio collage" that students could put together as a class 
project using any well known psychologist (for whom there is video and/or audio 
interviews available of course).  Here's the link to the project:

http://www.thinglink.com/scene/366016018553765889#tlsite

Here's how I created it:


  *   Audio bytes were found all over the web - YouTube of course and 
archive.org<http://archive.org/>
  *   I used an audio capture tool (Audio Hijack in my case, but many such 
programs exist) to grab the audio as it played in my browser
  *   I edited the audio down to the essential quotes using an audio editing 
tool (the free Audacity tool would be fine)
  *   Uploaded the audio to my www.soundcloud.com<http://www.soundcloud.com/> 
account
  *   Created a simple collage using Photoshop (any image editor would work) 
and arranging images I found from wikipedia and clipart.com<http://clipart.com/>
  *   After uploading the collage to 
www.thinglink.com<http://www.thinglink.com/>, I linked the audio from 
Soundcloud to the various spots on the collage

What's the pedagogical goal? Well, I personally gained a deeper understanding 
of and appreciation for Skinner and I think students would also gain such an 
understanding of whoever they chose to focus on.  Also, in addition to just 
linking from a spot on the image to an audio sound byte, note that there is a 
small amount of text that can be typed next to the audio player.  Students 
could be required to tell the listener why the quote is important - what does 
it reveal about the psychologist's theory?  What misconception does the quote 
clarify?  What does the quote reveal about the psychologist as a person?

What do you think? Ways to improve it?

Michael

Michael A. Britt, Ph.D.
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
http://www.ThePsychFiles.com<http://www.ThePsychFiles.com/>
Twitter: mbritt







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