Purpose and preference in educational podcasting

Files

RA_hdl_62173.pdf (117.66 KB)
  (Restricted Access)

Date

2012

Authors

van Zanten, Rob
Somogyi, Simon Alexander
Curro, Gina

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

British Journal of Educational Technology, 2012; 43(1):130–138

Statement of Responsibility

Rob Van Zanten, Simon Somogyi and Gina Curro

Conference Name

Abstract

The application of podcasting for educational purposes is growing fast in universities. There are several benefits of this asynchronous, direct communication and interaction between teacher and student. Nonetheless, the benefits, the pedagogical value of podcasting the traditional lecture format, have come into question. Furthermore, issues have been raised regarding lengthy and costly download times, and the fact that students need to make time to listen to them. For these reasons, using short 3–5-minute podcasts that summarise the lecture have been suggested. This paper explores how students interact with different types of podcasts. The study compares download and course evaluation data of a series of short-summary podcasts with full-lecture podcasts produced for the same university course. The findings show that students value full-lecture podcasts as highly as the short-summary podcasts, despite the fact that full-lecture podcasts are downloaded to a markedly lesser degree. The cause of this anomaly appears to lie in the different purposes that dictate podcast use. The paper concludes by noting that both full-lecture and short-summary podcasts serve as useful tools for student learning in university contexts.

School/Discipline

School of Agriculture, Food and Wine

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Article first published online: 23 DEC 2010

Access Status

Rights

© 2010 The Authors. British Journal of Educational Technology © 2010 Becta

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record