Author/Authors :
Mark J. W. Lee، نويسنده , , Catherine McLoughlin and Anthony Chan، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Podcasting allows audio content from one or more user-selected feeds or channels
to be automatically downloaded to one’s computer as it becomes available,
then later transferred to a portable player for consumption at a convenient time
and place. It is enjoying phenomenal growth in mainstream society, alongside
otherWeb 2.0 technologies that enable Internet users to author and distribute
rich media content quickly and easily. Instead of using the technology for the
mere recording and dissemination of lectures and other instructor-centred
information, the project reported on in this article focused on enabling students
to create their own podcasts for distribution to their peers. The article
describes how engaging in the podcasting exercise promoted collaborative
knowledge building among the student-producers, as evidenced through
focus-group interviewing and an analysis of the products of their shared dialogue
and reflection. The findings suggest that the collaborative development
of audio learning objects enabling student conceptualisations of disciplinary
content to be shared with peers is a powerful way of stimulating both
individual and collective learning, as well as supporting social processes of
perspective-taking and negotiation of meaning that underpin knowledge
creation.