As part of the Applied Practice in Blended and Online Education module I will be presenting an expert session on mobile learning. This will be hosting within Napier's Blackboard Collaborate environment which I have used in the past as a student but never as the host of an event. Unfortunately my own university does not have any kind of webinar platform at the moment so I decided I better take a look at the available options if I am to host further webinars in my own teaching.
We have a very small budget for this kind of thing so I decided to begin by experimenting with free services. As part of my mentoring with fellow geekucator Nicky I decided to give google + hangouts a try. google + hangouts is a free platform for hosting online meetings with up to 10 participants. Unfortunately for whatever reason I could only see a white screen beside the chat window and Nicky could not hear or see me. We therefore had to check out some of the alternatives.
A search for free webinar services brings back a huge amount of results. Some services are financed by advertising, others offer limited free services with additional features available at a price (freemium), and others have very tight restrictions on the number of participants - in one case it was a site offering the chance to host a webinar with only one participant!
After technical problems with another couple of sites we finally had success with liveminutes which offers free webinars for up to 20 participants. I had to create an account on the site which took about a minute and then we were up a running. The site produces a link which you can send to participants or you can email invitations directly. The tool seems to include all the standard webinar features such as a whiteboard, audio and video chat, and uploading of files. What didn't immediately seem to be obvious were interactive features likes polls or questions. I will have to investigate the site a bit further to find out if these features are available. This is something I definitely want to use in my expert session because without any audience participation I think a 60 minute webinar could feel very long indeed - for both the participants AND the presenter. The techniques and content I decide to use will be the subject of my next blog.
I do want to mention a couple of features of liveminutes that I did especially like - as I have little experience of webinar software I don't know if other programmes offer these too. I received an automatic email message from liveminutes reminding me to close my meeting because I hadn't done it properly. On closing the meeting there was also an option to have all of the notes produced during the meeting saved automatically into a pdf file. This is an excellent (and low effort) way to make sure everyone has all of the details from a meeting and doesn't have to take notes themselves. It is perhaps not quite the full recording facility that I know some webinar platforms offer but at this price ($0) I can live with that.
Finally, I should mention an excellent website that I visited again whilst trying to find free webinar tools. Richard Byrne's award winning blog, freetech4teachers.com, has links to a lot of free software as well as articles and reviews. It should be compulsory reading for anyone interested in this area.
Now I am going to get busy deciding how to avoid "death by Powerpoint" - the answers will (hopefully) be revealed in my next post.
Neil
Neil, I thought liveminutes worked just fine for our one-to-one. It would be good to try it out with a few more to see how multiple talkers are managed (can you switch people on and off!)...
AntwortenLöschenAlso, a recent Yammer post suggested that Garr Reynolds' Presentation Zen (http://www.presentationzen.com/) could revolutionalise your ppt presentations...hope it's useful as I haven't had a chance to look yet.
Hi Nicky,
AntwortenLöschenthanks for the comment. As it happens I bought the Presentation Zen book and read it over Christmas. It is definitely inspiring especially for someone like me who has never studied design or thought too creatively about slide layout. I am definitely going to try and make use of some of his ideas. Kawasaki doesn't mention academic presentations specifically but I hope I can learn something useful anyway.
Neil
Hi Neil,
AntwortenLöschenMost of the webinar products have features such as sending a transcript at the end of the meeting to all participants, transferring documents to attendees either on the fly or post webinar and most of them will allow you to record. I have experience of using WebEx, Go to Web, Adobe Connect and to be honest most of the tools have the same feature sets, but tend to selling them differently.