My name is Troy White, and I have Adult Attention Disor...
1) Using iShowu "borrowed" a few tracks from the interwebs
- When you set the recording to "system" it will grab the audio of anything playing
- open up the screen casting in Any Video Converter and convert to mp3
2) Garageband
a) import student oral
b) add a few effects to the audio (the kids might call it autotune)
- amplifier (British Clean), Voice wa, Theatre, etc. There are a ton of 3 minute tutorials on this
c) import borrowed track d) cut up both student oral and track - can't really go wrong here...
e) Export my track as Mp3
3) Photoshop - Find a decent Joseph Conrad image from the web a) and one of a dude named Skillet?
b) some blonde lady's hair
***Note, copying from the web and pasting into Photoshop is very easy with your command+ctrl+shift+4
*** good opportunity for students to play with layers and filters
c) Export image
5) Blabberize
a) set up image for the mouth moving business
6) iShowu again
*** set this to "record system audio"
a) set the capture parameters to Blabberize
b) record the screencast
c) Hit play on the song
7) On the second song, I did not want Joseph's mouth to move the entire time, so I
a) first screencasted the Blabberize while I stated the lyrics
b) then aligned the chronology of the Blabberized screencasting to the audio track and
c) ONE LAST Screen cast.... it is a little off.
Voila! I swear this only took a few minutes...
Awesome bits...
1) Screencasting + Blabberize
a) Poetry recital with author's image
b) Parody and focus on diction - Analyze your teachers... use their image, use their language, why are they so repetitive with their catch phrases, etc.?
c) History - sooo much, autobiographical prior knowledge
d) Create a Monologue - characters in context - out of context
There is something to be done with the mashup audio as well...
- Much like a word, cloud they can extract the principal language - inherent themes, key phrases, etc.... just a thought.
**FUN - they like the mouth to move... and
***Motivation - lot's of students prefer to be dramatic than expository. When they can be a character, they are less inhibited
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