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Plugs, Play, Pedagogy
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Inhalt bereitgestellt von Kyle Stedman. Alle Podcast-Inhalte, einschließlich Episoden, Grafiken und Podcast-Beschreibungen, werden direkt von Kyle Stedman oder seinem Podcast-Plattformpartner hochgeladen und bereitgestellt. Wenn Sie glauben, dass jemand Ihr urheberrechtlich geschütztes Werk ohne Ihre Erlaubnis nutzt, können Sie dem hier beschriebenen Verfahren folgen https://de.player.fm/legal.
A playful, collaborative, monthly podcast on teaching writing and rhetoric in the 21st century Hosted by Kyle Stedman, Rockford University Also available on Stitcher (http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/plugs-play-pedagogy) and iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/plugs-play-pedagogy/id909930552).
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12 Episoden
Alle als (un)gespielt markieren ...
Manage series 2400693
Inhalt bereitgestellt von Kyle Stedman. Alle Podcast-Inhalte, einschließlich Episoden, Grafiken und Podcast-Beschreibungen, werden direkt von Kyle Stedman oder seinem Podcast-Plattformpartner hochgeladen und bereitgestellt. Wenn Sie glauben, dass jemand Ihr urheberrechtlich geschütztes Werk ohne Ihre Erlaubnis nutzt, können Sie dem hier beschriebenen Verfahren folgen https://de.player.fm/legal.
A playful, collaborative, monthly podcast on teaching writing and rhetoric in the 21st century Hosted by Kyle Stedman, Rockford University Also available on Stitcher (http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/plugs-play-pedagogy) and iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/plugs-play-pedagogy/id909930552).
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12 Episoden
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Plugs, Play, Pedagogy
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1 Episode 12: Video Didn't Kill the Composition Student 1:02:49
1:02:49
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How can composition instructors use video in the classroom? Even if they're scared? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 12: Video Didn't Kill the Composition Student Transcript available as a Google Doc here ; check it out for more links, and feel free to comment on anything that needs comments. Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . This episode is co-edited with John Silvestro from Miami University, @j_silvestro , silvesj2@miamioh.edu. Part 1: Interview with Jason Palmeri Jason Palmeri , @jasonpalmeri , is associate professor of English and Director of Composition at Miami University and author of Remixing Composition . Jason and John chat about how Jason got into teaching video, some of his assignments, and some of the theories that undergird his practice. Plus, they're both nice and fun. Part 2: Scripting Our Way to Video Next, John and Kyle talk about John's assignment of having students write scripts for movies that they don't actually produce. You'll hear two examples of those written scripts read aloud for the show by John and Sally Neidhard. And we talk about how kind of weird that is; Sergei Eisenstein is invoked. See the show transcript for lots of links and for the exact scripts the students wrote. Part 3: Crystal's Review of Video Scholarship Finally, Crystal VanKooten, assistant professor of writing and rhetoric at Oakland University ( @crystalvk ), discusses some fundamental scholarship on video and composition. Including: Sarah Arroyo, Participatory Composition: Video Culture, Writing, and Electracy Jody Shipka, Toward a Composition Made Whole Bump Halbritter, Mics, Cameras, Symbolic Action: Audio-Visual Rhetoric for Writing Teachers Stuart Selber, Multiliteracies for a Digital Age Resources Jason mentions Michael Wesch's work on YouTube . John mentions Kirby Ferguson's " Everything is a Remix " and Tony Zhou’s “Every Frame a Painting” series, including " F for Fake (1973) - How to Structure a Video Essay " The Internet Movie Script Database celtx (tools for scripting/planning movies) End Matter The show is licensed by a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License . Two sound effects were from freesound.org : alex8valdes, " Strange T.V. sound " Ohrwurm, “ Working with shovel.wav " All the music is freely available at OverClocked ReMix : Big Giant Circles and some1namedjeff, “ Thunderstruck ” Mazedude, “ Torvus Chips ” Hylian Lemon, “ Essence of Lime " Disco Dan, " Blue Lightning "…
What are the intersections between composition pedagogy and creative writing? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 11: Composing Creatively Transcript available as a Google Doc here ; check it out for more links, and feel free to comment on anything that needs comments. Part 1: Why this book? First, you'll hear me talk to Danita Berg , one of the co-editors of Creative Composition: Inspiration and Techniques for Writing Instruction . We discuss the different training that MFAs and PhDs in rhet/comp get, the need for this book, and where the split in the fields came from. Eventually, we got into a big, rambly conversation about multimodality and technology in both fields, but it was too crazy to edit down for this episode--so you'll just have to ask us about it later. Part 2: Digging into Details Next, you'll hear 3 pieces self-produced by authors of chapters in Creative Composition : Denise Landrum-Geyer talks about the importance of essaying, as a verb, a concept that connects our fields. Anna Leahy discusses how to cultivate talent, get better at writing, and be gritty. Shawn Kerivan defends the teaching of grammar as a tool with its own history, meaning, and depth, not as something dry to discuss in a vacuum. End Matter Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . Please contact me if you have ideas for future episodes or stories about how you've used the ideas you've heard on the show! The theme music at the beginning of the episode is by Cactus May , graduate student in rhetoric and composition, and you heard three pieces that are freely available at OverClocked ReMix : Zisotto, " The Depetrification of the Submerged Forest " Omni-Psyence & TeraCMusic, " Jewel of Enhasa " Disco Dan, " Blue Lightning " The show is licensed by a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License .…
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Plugs, Play, Pedagogy
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1 Episode 10: Exploring the Past 1:04:12
1:04:12
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What kinds of relationships do we have to the places we inhabit? And what do those relationships have to do with our teaching? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 10: Exploring the Past Transcript available here as a Google Doc full of links. If you see edits I should make or links I should add, go ahead and leave a comment. Part 1: Researching My House I'm obsessed with my 99-year-old house. So I made a 27-minute audio piece exploring my relationship to it. That's it. Music you hear in this segment, all estimated to be from 1916 (the year the house was built): William Thomas, “ Rose of No Man’s Land ” Bresnen, “ You’re a Dangerous Girl ” Don Richardson, “ Arkansas Traveler ” Imperial Quartet of Chicago, “ Perfect Day " Paul Reimers, “ Memories ” George Ballard, “ There’s a Long Long Trail ” Links to other stuff is in the transcript . Part 2: Jody Shipka's Response In hopes that someone could tell me what my piece in Part 1 has to do with pedagogy, I turned to two smart friends who are interested in the past. First, there's Jody Shipka, who teaches at University of Maryland, Baltimore County, tweets at @remediatethis , and is currently working on a project called "Inhabiting Dorothy." You can find out more about this and other projects at remediatethis.com . Part 3: Jen Michaels' Response Next, we hear a response from Jen Michaels, a doctoral candidate at the Ohio State University. You can follow her on Twitter at @jenlmichaels and learn more about her work at jenmichaels.net . She mentions the Digital Archive of Literacy Narratives a lot, which you know about, right? End Matter Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . Please contact me if you have ideas for future episodes or stories about how you've used the ideas you've heard on the show! The theme music at the beginning of the episode is by Cactus May , graduate student in rhetoric and composition, and the final song was Disco Dan, " Blue Lightning ." The show is licensed by a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License . Images And just for fun, here's some of the cool stuff I mentioned in Part 1.…
How can I use podcasting in my composition classes? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 9: Podcasting with Students Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . If you have ideas for future episodes, please contact me! Part 1: Podcasting Social Justice First, I interview Faith Kurtyka ( @fmkurtyka ) from Creighton University about a recent podcasting assignment she gave to students in the Cortina Community, a living-learning community at her school. We then hear an excerpt from one of the projects her students conducted: “The American System and Pay Inequality” by Vincent Salazar and Kaylee Stankus. You can hear their full episode and learn about all the other students work at the Cortina Community blog . Part 2: The Week in Review Assignment Here, I play a brief excerpt from the gazillions I could have chosen from two 2012 pieces from Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy by Jennifer L. Bowie ( @starre , screenspace.org ): " Rhetorical Roots and Media Future: How Podcasting Fits into the Computers and Writing Classroom " and " Podcasting in a Writing Class? Considering the Possibilities ." Specifically, we hear about Bowie's "week in review" assignment, which asks students to use the serial audio format of podcasting to teach each other about what they've learned in class. The full episode, and the resources she mentions in this clip, are available here . In the interlude before Part 3 begins, I mention 3 pieces of scholarship on podcasting in the classroom: Ewing, Laura. " Rhetorically Analzying Online Composition Spaces ." Pedagogy 13.3 (2013): 554-61. Ng'ambi, Dick, and Annette Lombe. " Using Podcasting to Facilitate Student Learning: A Constructivist Perspective ." Educational Technology & Society 15.4 (2012): 181-92. Krause, Steven D. " Broadcast Composition: Using Audio Files and Podcasts in an Online Writing Course ." Computers and Composition Online (2006). Part 3: More Scholarship, More Ideas, More Trauman Finally, we hear a segment prepared by Ryan Trauman ( @trauman ) with an overview of five pieces of scholarship on podcasting in the classroom. (By the way, I would love to feature more segments like this. What do you know about? What have you been reading?) Bowie, Jennifer L. (2012). “ Rhetorical Roots and Media Future: How Podcasting Fits into the Computers and Writing Classroom .” Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy, 16(2). Friesen, Norm. “ The Lecture as a Transmedial Pedagogical Form: a Historical Analysis .” Educational Researcher 40.3 (2011): 95–102. Gray, Kathleen et al. “ Web 2.0 Authorship: Issues of Referencing and Citation for Academic Integrity .” The Internet and Higher Education 11.2 (2008): 112–118. Jones, Leigh A. “ Podcasting and Performativity: Multimodal Invention in an Advanced Writing Class .” Composition Studies 38.2 (2010): 75–91. Print. Reid, Alex. “ Portable Composition: iTunes University and Networked Pedagogies .” Computers and Composition 25.1 (2008): 61–78. End Matter The theme music at the beginning of the episode is by Cactus May , graduate student in rhetoric and composition. You also heard four pieces from OverClocked ReMix, a site filled with free rearrangements of videogame tunes: Brandon Strader, Chickenwarlord, Hylian Lemon, & Tuberz McGee, " No Rain in the Desert " Joey Grady, " The Seven Wise Men Shot First " Djjd, " Serpent's Spiral " Disco Dan, " Blue Lightning " This episode is licensed by a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike license.…
What do writing and rhetoric scholars care about? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 8: Looking into the Fish Tank: Tiny Encounters at CCCC Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . If you have ideas for future episodes, please contact me! Transcript available here . Part 1: Tiny Encounters As I walked the 2015 meeting of the Conference on College Composition and Communication , I stuck a mic in people's faces and asked them a simple question: what do you care about that you wish other people knew about? You'll hear lots of answers in the episode from these people, in this order: Heather Branstetter, Virginia Military Institute, @findheatherlee Rachel Gramer, University of Louisville, @rachelgramer Megan Faver Hartline, University of Louisville, @meganhartline Steven Hopkins, Arizona State University, @seemylittleknee Matthew Osorn, Clemson University, @hellojuice_ Caitlin Ray, University of Nebraska at Omaha, @ray_raycaitlin Steven Hammer, St. Joseph's University, @patchbaydoor Greg Wilson, Texas Tech University, @baconred A.D. Carson, Clemson University, @aydeethegreat , aydeethegreat.com Amanda Licastro, CUNY Grad Center, @amandalicastro , The Writing Studies Tree Janice Walker, Georgia Southern University, @janicewalker , The LILAC Group Scott Reed, Georgia Gwinnett College, @rhetoroxor , C's the Day on Facebook Kate Pantelides, Eastern Michigan University, @klpanteli Megan McIntyre, Dartmouth College, @rcmeg Part 2: Say Something Silly Now, Please I guess I did ask one other question: "What else could the letters CCCC stand for?" You may or may not be surprised at the number of times cats were mentioned. So there's that. End Matter The theme music at the beginning of the episode is by Cactus May , graduate student in rhetoric and composition. You also heard two pieces from OverClocked ReMix (both water-related, natch): halc, " Another Seascape ," and Disco Dan, " Bubble Man (Wants to Get) Funked Up ." Both are free and part of a massive collection of videogame music remixes.…
What is the DALN? And how can I use it in my classes? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 7: Teaching with the Digital Archive of Literacy Narratives Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . If you have ideas for future episodes, please contact me! Introduction This episode is produced in cooperation with the Digital Archive of Literacy Narratives , "a publicly available archive of personal literacy narratives in a variety of formats (text, video, audio) that together provide a historical record of the literacy practices and values of contributors, as those practices and values change." Learn more about the DALN at its website , and if you see their booth set up at a conference (cough, CCCC , cough), drop by to learn more and to submit your own narrative! The episode begins with the narrative of Charles Weinberg; you can watch his video or learn more about his piece at his record page in the DALN . Part 1: Stories that Speak to Us First we hear from Cynthia L. Selfe, Humanities Distinguished Professor in the Department of English at Ohio State University and one of the founders of the DALN, and Scott Lloyd DeWitt ( @ScottLloydDW ), Associate Professor of English at The Ohio State University and one of the DALN's earliest supporters. They discuss the origin story of the DALN, the skills they learned when collecting narratives to store there, and the process of editing Stories that Speak to Us: Exhibits from the Digital Archive of Literacy Narratives , a free, born-digital book edited by Selfe, DeWitt, and H. Lewis Ulman as part of the Computers and Composition Digital Press . Part 2: One Way to Use the DALN in Your Classroom Next we hear from Ben McCorkle ( @illiac ), associate professor of English at OSU Marion and one of the current co-directors of the DALN. He shares the story of how he worked the DALN into the syllabus for an upcoming class. Part 3: The DALN in Practice Finally, we hear from Kate Comer, assistant professor of English at Barry University and editor of the online journal Harlot , and Michael Harker, Assistant Professor of English at Georgia State University and another current co-director of the DALN. They discuss their article " The Pedagogy of the Digital Archive of Literacy Narratives: A Survey " from the March 2015 issue of Computers and Composition , which "briefly reviews the historical uses of literacy narratives in composition courses before turning to current experiments incorporating the DALN." End Matter The theme music at the beginning of the episode is by Cactus May , graduate student in rhetoric and composition. You also heard two pieces from OverClocked ReMix: PxFury, " Dragons of Paradise " and Disco Dan, " Blue Lightning ." Both are free and part of a massive collection of videogame music remixes.…
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Plugs, Play, Pedagogy
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How is our composing and teaching affected by the places we inhabit? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 6: Locations of Writing Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . If you have ideas for future episodes, please contact me! Transcript is available here . In the September 2014 issue of College Composition and Communication , editor Kathleen Blake Yancey opened a special issue on locations of writing with ten vignettes--short reflective pieces where authors considered the meanings of the places where they write and teach. Four of those vignettes are featured here, read by their authors: Joy Santee, "Writer in the Attic: Place-Based Constraints on Research Writing" Lisa Lebduska, "Finding the Metaphor" Marcia Bost, "Writing in and for the Cloud" Peter Wayne Moe, "Of Ballparks and Battlefields" I add a bit of thoughts on the importance of narrative nonfiction and on the weirdness of the way we talk about digital spaces , but really, the focus is on the original authors, where it ought to be. The music you hear in this episode is all from Jamendo.com: “ A Heart with Your Name on It (Instrumental) ” by Kara Square “ With the Fishes ” by Nonsense Wind “ The Rise ” by Irokez “ More Like Aqua (take 01) ” by The James Quintet The four vignettes are Copyright 2014 by the National Council of Teachers of English. All rights reserved. Used by permission.…
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Plugs, Play, Pedagogy
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1 Grumble, Grumble: The Pitfalls of Gaming Pedagogy 1:05:26
1:05:26
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What complications can we expect when we teach with games? And why are we so afraid of play? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 5: Grumble, Grumble: The Pitfalls of Gaming Pedagogy Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . If you have ideas for future episodes, please contact me! Transcript is available here . Watch a screencast of this episode's main narration being recorded and edited into a final product on YouTube . Introduction Welcome to the second of two episodes dedicated to intersections of gaming and the pedagogy of teaching writing and rhetoric, both of which I co-edited with Stephanie Vie ( @digirhet ). Broadly speaking, the first episode dealt with specific ideas for teaching, while this episode digs into the messy complexities of gaming pedagogies (awesome as they are). We start out by sharing a teaching idea from Stephanie (using game walkthroughs in technical writing classes!) to get us into the idea of messiness, which we support with a clip from the previous episode : Samantha Blackmon talking about the messy topic of colonialism by using the videogame Bastion. Part 1: WoW, Games are Complicated! Part 1 consists of a lengthy interview with Rebekah Shultz Colby and Richard Colby, lecturers at the University of Denver, where they teach courses on writing, rhetoric, research methods, and videogames. They’re also editors with Matthew S. S. Johnson of the 2013 book Rhetoric/Composition/Play through Videogames . We talk about World of Warcraft, students using WoW as a research space, and lots of other things. Part 2: Why Are We Afraid of Play? Part 2 is an interview with Jennifer deWinter, assistant professor of rhetoric and faculty in the Interactive Media and Game Development program at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Her recent edited collection Computer Games and Technical Communication was just released by Ashgate (co-editor Ryan Moeller) and she has just finished writing a book on Shigeru Miyamoto for the Influential Game Designer book series for which she is one of the founding editors. You can find her on academia.edu and on twitter at @jennomiko . She reminds us of some of the deeper things going on when we use games in the classroom: the often-unexamined values they embody, and our weird relationship to the concept of play. Part 3: Let's All Play Along! Finally, hear what happens when Stephanie and Jennifer watch me (Kyle) play various NES games. What ideas do these games remind us of, and what games are then inspired by the games, in a never-ending circle of gameplay and bleeps and bloops? You'll hear me playing Adventures of Lolo, Donkey Kong, Tecmo Super Bowl, Mega Man 3, Metroid, Pinball, Contra, Zelda 2: The Adventure of Link, Super Mario Bros. 3, and Castlevania. To learn more about the composers of these soundtracks, check out the list at OverClocked Remix . End Matter The music from OverClocked ReMix you heard in this episode includes: Uboichi, " Les Gnomes Exotique " Vurez, " Melancholy Dreams " Doc Nano, " The Eggerlander March " Disco Dan, " Blue Lightning "…
Learn creative ways that teachers of writing and rhetoric are using games and play in their classrooms. Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 4: A New Hope for Games in the Classroom Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . If you have ideas for future episodes, please contact me! Transcript is available here (where you'll find links to a lot of things mentioned in the episode). Welcome to the first of two episodes dedicated to intersections of gaming and the pedagogy of teaching writing and rhetoric, both of which I co-edited with Stephanie Vie ( @digirhet ). Introduction First, to get us going, Stephanie and I discuss the tricky issue of gaming identity: what does it mean to be a gamer? How do those identities affect our teaching and researching? Part 1: Ideas for Teaching with Games Next, we hear from four awesome teachers about some very specific ideas: Jason Custer ( @CusterTeaching ) shares some goodies from an entire class on games and procedural rhetoric. Matt Beale ( @coffeebreak808 ) teaches his students HTML with a game about developing a pro-wrestler identity, complete with D&D-like stats. Phill Alexander ( @phillalexander ) uses HabitRPG and League of Legends to encourage deeper levels of participation from his students. Kevin Moberly emphasizes play in assignments involving paper-bag puppets (which are more amazing than you think) and World of Warcraft . Part 2: Not Your Mama's Gamer Next, we hear an extended interview between me, Stephanie, and Samantha Blackmon ( @saffista , Not Your Mama's Gamer ). Among other things, our conversation covers the benefits and problems of asking students to create digital or analog games, the ways she sneaks games into just about any class she teaches, and ways of dealing with the material realities of access and space when teaching with games. We also laugh a lot. End Matter My theme music is by Cactus May at Ohio University; check out his work at http://heycactus.weebly.com . You also hear some amazing music from the artists at OverClocked ReMix, an ever-growing resource for 100% free game music rearrangements: Mattias Holmgren, " Zelda Heineken " The Wingless, " All Nations Rise " bLiNd, " Dirty Coins " Sir_NutS, " Crimea River "…
How does copyright law affect the stuff I make--and that my students make? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 3: Using Creative Commons to Make Stuff Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . Transcript is available here . My original plan was to find cool stuff for you to listen to that other people had posted--a curated collection of content from all my favorite sites. But as I dug into the advance searches of these sites and explored the various flavors of Creative Commons licenses, I knew that that was my show topic: navigating the tricky waters of copyright when you want to reuse content in something new of your own (like a podcast, but not necessarily a podcast). Here's how I got there: Part 1: An Easy Introduction to Copyright In which I describe how I introduce the public domain, copyright, and Creative Commons to my students--and thusly explain it to you, dear listener. In this section, you'll also hear about: " Public Domain: Frequently Asked Questions " from teachingcopyright.org The fair use checklist from the Columbia University Libraries Copyright Advisory Office Details of the Creative Commons licenses Part 2: Me Searching for Stuff In which I describe the path I took while trying to find online content related to teaching writing and rhetoric that I could legally curate and use in my podcast. Here, you'll hear: Bad Rhetoric, " Phoenix- Bad Rhetoric " 365DaysofSound, " 25.01.2011 - David Cameron and his never-ending rhetoric " UKarts_sciences, " Race, Rhetoric, and Technology in the Digital Age: Adam J. Banks "; " Communication and Rhetoric in a Multi-Modal World: Craig Crowder "; " Mapping The Abstract: Jenny Rice " umichSweetland, " Transfer & Writing - Rebecca Nowacek " trauman, " Incorporating an Audio Assignment into your Classroom: The PSA " JasonElrod, " Writing with Pen.aif " D. Marshall, " Cynthia Selfe on multimodality and instructors " UTexas SPURS, " SPURS - A Deeper Look at Kairos " Justin Hodgson, " RM100 Episode 1 " I mention a few other resources that I didn't link to, but instead of bulking up this space with them, you can just check the transcript for links. Part 3: Resources In which I recommend the following resources: Search.creativecommongs.org for sites that have CC built into their DNA An awesome copyright-related comic: Keith Aoki, James Boyle, and Jennifer Jenkins, Tales from the Public Domain: Bound by Law? Traci Gardner (tengrrl), " Updating the Copyright Puzzle " Oh no! I said that DMAC had a list of Copyright and Legal Resources--and they used to. But now it's gone. It used to live here , but archive.org doesn't even have a copy. Sorry! I suggested you discuss real court cases that revolve around fair use with your students. For examples, reference the Stanford University Libraries “ Summaries of Fair Use Cases ,” Laura Gamse’s “ Fair Use Victories: Five Court Cases Upholding Your Right to Sample and Remix Copyrighted Works ,” or Martine Courant Rife’s chapter “Ideas Toward a Fair Use Heuristic: Visual Rhetoric and Composition” (summarized on this blog post ). To analyze them, you can use the fair use checklist at the website of the Copyright Advisory Office of Columbia University Libraries . I also mentioned the Top Intellectual Property Developments of the Year , edited by Clancy Ratliff and sponsored by the CCCC Intellectual Property Committee End Matter My theme music is by Cactus May at Ohio University; check out his work at http://heycactus.weebly.com . You also heard “ Heart of a Beginner ” by Marc 101 Music on Soundcloud, “ It’s Working ” by Nonsense Wind on Jamendo, and “ Something Borrowed (Rhetoric) ” by Steve Lawson and Daniel Berkman, hosted on the account of solobasssteve on Soundcloud. All are licensed by Creative Commons. And because I love it so, so much, you also heard the show close out (as always) with Disco Dan's " Blue Lightning ."…
Why are teaching philosophy statements so bad? And how can they be better? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 2: Attack of the Cloned Teaching Statements Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . Transcript available here . In search of answers to why teaching philosophy statements bother me so much, I share insights from three experts on the subject: Laura Runge ( @laura_runge ) from University of South Florida: We spoke about the rhetorical stance of the teaching philosophy statement, why 1 page is a good length, and all sorts of other things. Karen Kelsky ( @professorisin ) from theprofessorisin.com : We hear Tara Wood from Rockford University read Kelsky's post “ The Dreaded Teaching Statement: Eight Pitfalls .” You will also hear the sound of magic wands; this is not a joke. Kathie Gossett ( @gossettphd ) from Iowa State University: We spoke specifically about how digital scholars represent their teaching online, including (but not limited to) the teaching statement. After those three parts, I mention the following resources: Kathryn Hume's book Surviving Your Academic Job Hunt: Advice for Humanities PhDs Cheryl Ball's site Get a Job! , including her page on teaching philosophies , and her articles at Inside Higher Ed . Karen Kelsky's site The Professor Is In . “ Teaching with Technology: Remediating the Teaching Philosophy Statement ” from Computers and Composition 29 (2012) by Phill Alexander, Karissa Chabot, Matt Cox, Dànielle Nicole DeVoss, Barb Gerber, Staci Perryman-Clark, Julie Platt, Donnie Johnson Sackey, and Mary Wendt. Our theme music is by Cactus May at Ohio University; check out his work at http://heycactus.weebly.com . You also heard 3 tracks from OverClocked ReMix: “ In the Green Gloom ” by Argle, “ Zanarkand String Quartet ,” arranged by GrayFox1217, and Disco Dan, " Blue Lightning ."…
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Plugs, Play, Pedagogy
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How do teachers today prepare for a new semester? Plugs, Play, Pedagogy Episode 1: Setting Up Class Produced and recorded by Kyle Stedman ( plugsplaypedagogy@writingcommons.org ; @kstedman ), assistant professor of English at Rockford University, in cooperation with KairosCast and Writing Commons . Today's episode is focused on how instructors set up for class, especially how they use digital tools and spaces. First, we hear from four people from Old Dominion University telling stories of failures when setting up class: Shelley Rodrigo ( @rrodrigo ) reminds us of the importance of using target=blank in her html code on Blackboard. Sarah Spangler ( @sarah_spangler ) emphasizes the importance of user-experience testing with sites we make for students. Megan Mize ( @MerryQuinn ) tells a story of a class that attempted to use Twitter to build community but that left students feeling disconnected. Dan Richards ( @dprichards ) and I spoke for a while about his failed experiment to use Blackboard forums to build community. Next, we hear from four instructors who share successes: Samuel Stinson from Ohio University ( @stinssd ) reminds us of the importance of group ethos in both online and face-to-face spaces. Jennifer Hewerdine from Southern Illinois University--Carbondale ( @Hewerdine ) emphasizes the importance of teaching digital genres that students are already familiar with. Elizabeth Gianfrancisco from Myron B. Thompson Academy describes a switch from Moodle to Canvas, mentions Google Docs and Voice Thread, and praises a student activity involving MineCraft and Frankenstein . Colin Charlton from the University of Texas PanAmerican ( his blog & the journal he co-edits, CrossPol ) is using iBooks and Wix sites in all kinds of creative ways. Our theme music is by Cactus May at Ohio University; check out his work at http://heycactus.weebly.com . You also heard two amazing tracks from OverClocked ReMix: AMT and Neblix, " Light Your Way " and Disco Dan, " Blue Lightning ." UPDATE: A transcript for this episode is now available, which includes links to all sound effects used.…
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