Tag: audio
Family Reunion
The photographs, strung like uneven pearls
across the years, challenge our memories,
declaring our connections, chosen moments posed
on cusps we didn’t recognize, and only now
see
https://soundcloud.com/joanvinallcox/familhyreunion
https://soundcloud.com/joanvinallcox/familhyreunionhttps://soundcloud.com/joanvinallcox/familhyreunion
Hearing Winter
I’m hearing this a lot lately –
Mapping the Wilderness
To sample a poem from my recently published collection – available from http://www.blurb.com/b/4591664-mapping-the-wilderness – listen to me reading –
Approaching Sixty, I See That … https://soundcloud.com/joanvinallcox/at-midlife-i-see-that – Hope you find it meaningful, and perhaps buy a copy of my collection.
Courage at eighty is different from at twenty
But both ages carry their future constantly –
A fearsome thrust into an unmapped wilderness.
To carry your future at twenty is to seek
The wilderness because it must be mapped
And shaped. There are roads to clear and homes
To build, and no one has given you a plan
For your wilderness, (just the one they didn’t use in theirs).
So you thrust forward, knowing too little and enough,
Building blindly wherever you find a clearing, lifting
The log of your childhood so it bridges your fears,
Confident that it might not collapse on you.
A fearsome thrust carrying life forward blindly
At eighty requires enough love to endure
Despite loss, and endure because of loss to come,
And endure because of the sweetness still here, if
Courage persists. And, despite (because?) the compass pointing
Through the wilderness to the edge of the map,
Tells a tale seen over and over about endings, despite this,
To work through today knowing
too much, and not enough, about tomorrow.
Courage at eighty is different from at twenty
But both ages carry their future constantly –
A fearsome thrust into an unmapped wilderness.
Second Last Class – Seeing Early Results
I’ve been teaching a course called Oral Rhetoric, a course where I work with students on their public speaking, both in face-to-face situations and in creating online audio recordings. Yesterday was the second last class and we spent most of the class time listening to their second last assignment, a commercial/pitch to advertise their final assignment – a story of theirs that they create a recording of and post online. The recordings of their pitches we heard were wonderful, and why wouldn’t they be. These students have spent all their lives listening to radio and tv commercials. They might not have Gladwell’s 10,000 hours of commercial-listening to gain expertise, but they do have hours and hours of soaking in just how persuasion works.
Over the term, I asked them to read about and practice two kinds of rhetorical skills:
- traditional –
- current –
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spin_%28public_relations%29
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weasel_word especially In Business
- http://www.heapr.com/#l=web&q=[%22Sound+Bites%22+]&p=[[1,1]] An interesting new search engine showing many links
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elevator_pitch
Both the traditional and the current forms of rhetoric were in evidence in the pitches we listened to, but what really thrilled me were the spontaneous responses. We’re using PBWorks for our course container and it allows comments on pages. At the bottom of the Pitch page, was a conversation, a series of comments praising many of the pitches. I was thrilled because I had been trying to develop a Community of Practice approach in the course. After almost every presentation or posting of student work, I asked students to describe their own experiences while doing their own presentation/recording and to give positive feedback to at least three of their classmates. This was an assignment and posted on a weekly Discussions page on the course wiki. I wanted them to learn from each other, and to get used to learning from colleagues as a way to continue learning in their futures. The responses in the Comments section of the Pitch page were an unrequired, spontaneous manifestation of giving each other feedback. What that says to me is that some of the students have developed the habit of responding, and could recognize the technical possibilities (the Comment space at the bottom of the page) for sharing those responses. They have both the communication and the digital know-how.
Makes me happy ![]()
Joan Vinall-Cox, PhD (905)
JNthWEB Consulting – http://jnthweb.ca/
Social Media & Learning
Georgian Bay & Labour Day
Georgian Bay's landscape is elemental, fantastic …
The beaver dam
http://animoto.com/play/Qnr7kWJMlwWXBsuNv0MQiw
Joan Vinall-Cox, JNthWEB Consulting – http://jnthweb.ca/
Social Media & Learning
iPhone – Voice Memo
Joan Vinall-Cox, PhD,
Social Media Consultant
Audio Quality

http://audioboo.fm/boos/57728-checking-the-sound-quality-of-the-iPhone-audioboo
Joan Vinall-Cox, PhD,
Social Media Consultant

