Welcome to "Ask the Tech Coach," a podcast for Instructional Coaches and Technology Integration Specialists.

In this episode of “Ask the Tech Coach,” Jeff and Susan give our best advice from the Instructional Coaches Network about how to create professional style screencasts without spending a ton of money or time.

If you would like to be a part of future podcasts and share your thoughts, please contact the podcast.  We would love to have you join the show.
Join the TeacherCast Tech Coaches Network!

Are you a Tech Coach or looking to become one this year?
Are you searching for support in your position?


The TeacherCast Tech Coaches Network, is a brand new Professional Learning Network designed specifically for Tech Coaches and designed to provide weekly support for all Instructional Coaches.

Click Here to Join!
Screencasting Tips & Tricks for Coaches

Why use Screencasting?
Tools (listed in order of votes from the coaches' network)

Screencastify
Camtasia
Loom
Quicktime
Screen-Cast-O-Matic
WeVideo
Screenflow
FlipGrid
Iorad

Best Tips & Tricks in Video Tutorial Production

Setup

Practice with audio and camera settings prior to trying to record
Practice with lighting. You will want light coming on to your face from the front not from behind you to make you look like a shadow.
Think about times to put your face in the video vs. When to not put your face in it.

Recording

Be real / authentic; don’t try to play a character. Be real for the educators who will be watching your tutorial.
Be aware of unnecessary mouse movement while you are speaking. However, be sure that it is able to be clearly seen when moving it.
Keep going and don’t stop once you start recording. There are awesome and simple editing tools that make it easy to edit out and clean up mistakes or pauses. Having one file to deal with is easier.
When it's time to click a button, type something, or hyperlink to a new website, always stay silent. This way you can edit out the breaks in the middle to make your final edit more professional.

Publishing

Keep your content at a viewable length. Think about students’ attention spans and then think about the time your teachers have to focus on a video tutorial.
Chunk the content into smaller pieces. Don’t do a full Google Classroom training, break up into small sections.
Know your destination (YouTube vs Google Drive)

Graphics

1280x720
Graphic Applications

Canva
Google Slides
PowerPoint





Contact the Podcast!

TeacherCast.net/VoiceMail
Twitter: @AskTheTechCoach
Email: [email protected]


Subscribe to “Ask the Tech Coach”

Apple Podcasts
Spotify

Welcome to "Ask the Tech Coach," a podcast for Instructional Coaches and Technology Integration Specialists.

In this episode of “Ask the Tech Coach,” Jeff and Susan give our best advice from the Instructional Coaches Network about how to create professional style screencasts without spending a ton of money or time.

If you would like to be a part of future podcasts and share your thoughts, please contact the podcast.  We would love to have you join the show.
Join the TeacherCast Tech Coaches Network!

Are you a Tech Coach or looking to become one this year?
Are you searching for support in your position?


The TeacherCast Tech Coaches Network, is a brand new Professional Learning Network designed specifically for Tech Coaches and designed to provide weekly support for all Instructional Coaches.

Click Here to Join!
Screencasting Tips & Tricks for Coaches

Why use Screencasting?
Tools (listed in order of votes from the coaches' network)

Screencastify
Camtasia
Loom
Quicktime
Screen-Cast-O-Matic
WeVideo
Screenflow
FlipGrid
Iorad

Best Tips & Tricks in Video Tutorial Production

Setup

Practice with audio and camera settings prior to trying to record
Practice with lighting. You will want light coming on to your face from the front not from behind you to make you look like a shadow.
Think about times to put your face in the video vs. When to not put your face in it.

Recording

Be real / authentic; don’t try to play a character. Be real for the educators who will be watching your tutorial.
Be aware of unnecessary mouse movement while you are speaking. However, be sure that it is able to be clearly seen when moving it.
Keep going and don’t stop once you start recording. There are awesome and simple editing tools that make it easy to edit out and clean up mistakes or pauses. Having one file to deal with is easier.
When it's time to click a button, type something, or hyperlink to a new website, always stay silent. This way you can edit out the breaks in the middle to make your final edit more professional.

Publishing

Keep your content at a viewable length. Think about students’ attention spans and then think about the time your teachers have to focus on a video tutorial.
Chunk the content into smaller pieces. Don’t do a full Google Classroom training, break up into small sections.
Know your destination (YouTube vs Google Drive)

Graphics

1280x720
Graphic Applications

Canva
Google Slides
PowerPoint





Contact the Podcast!

TeacherCast.net/VoiceMail
Twitter: @AskTheTechCoach
Email: [email protected]


Subscribe to “Ask the Tech Coach”

Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts
Amazon Music


Follow our Podcast on Social Media

The TeacherCast Educational Broadcasting Network | @TeacherCast
Ask the Tech Coach Podcast | @AsktheTechCoach


Follow our Hosts

Jeff Bradbury | @JeffBradbury
Susan Vincentz | @sv314dws


Join our PLN
Are you enjoying the TeacherCast Network, please share your thoughts with the world by commenting on iTunes today? I enjoy reading and sharing your comments on the podcast each week.
Let’s Work Together

Host: Jeff Bradbury @TeacherCast | @JeffBradbury
Email: [email protected]
Voice Mail: http://www.TeacherCast.net/voicemail
YouTube: http://www.TeacherCast.net/YouTube
iTunes: http://www.TeacherCast.net/iTunes


Check Out Additional TeacherCast Programming

TeacherCast Podcast (http://www.teachercast.net/tcp)
Educational Podcasting Today (http://www.educationalpodcasting.today)
The Jeff Bradbury Show (http://www.BuildYourEDUBrand.com)


Need a Presenter?

Jeff Bradbury (@TeacherCast) is available as a Keynote Speaker, Presenter, or to Broadcast your conference LIVE!


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