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Oral History via Skype |
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Written by Ken Panko
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Tuesday, 28 August 2007 |
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Skype is software that lets you call telephone numbers anywhere in the world over the internet using your computer. A small fee is charged to make calls to telephones, but you can make voice or video calls to other Skype users who are online for free.
In the fall of 2006 students in Professor George Chauncey's U.S. Lesbian and Gay History class used Skype to conduct oral history interviews with Yale LGBT alumni. For their final paper, students transcribed their interviews and analyzed their subjects' experiences.
Because the alumni who participated lived all over the world, they had to be interviewed over the telephone. To facilitate recording the interviews, ITG provided the students with headsets to use with their computers and a plugin for Skype which allowed them to record the conversations as digital audio files. ITG also assisted by showing the students how to use the software and how to upload their recordings to Classes*v2. These uploaded recordings were then shared with Yale's Manuscripts and Archives department which is preserving the oral histories as a Library resource. |
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Getting Provocative with Clickers |
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Written by Ken Panko
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Monday, 20 November 2006 |
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Marvin Chun
is a popular professor in the Psychology Department. So popular, in
fact, that students have created a “Marvin Chun is The Man!!!” fan
group in Facebook.
With that kind of reputation to live up to, Prof. Chun is eager to find
new ways to help make his Introduction to Psychology lectures more
engaging and interactive, a formidable task considering the class
regularly draws over 300 students.
This semester, Prof. Chun has begun asking his students multiple-choice
questions using a classroom response system (commonly referred to as
clickers) that automatically and anonymously records and displays
graphs of student responses.
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