Learning Studio celebrates Year One

It’s hard to believe but the Learning Studio opened its doors to the campus last March. In that time we’ve seen over a thousand camera and equipment check-outs, are averaging 900 room reservations a month, and have offered dozens of workshops and training sessions for students and faculty.

On March 6th, we’re inviting all faculty and staff to join us in celebrating Year One. You’ll hear from colleagues involved in our work with Cornerstone and Summer Online, digital storytelling classes, the Springboard Challenge, K-12 media training, photography workshops, and FilmFest.

It’s been a full year, and this is just scratching the surface.

Join us for lunch March 6th to hear the whole story and get a glimpse of what’s next.

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Teaching with Digital Storytelling

One focus of our work in the first year in the new Learning Studio has been digital storytelling. Previous posts have highlighted workshops in May and August where guests from the Center for Digital Storytelling helped ACU faculty and staff understand the value of the approach.

The following interviews from December asked faculty to reflect on the value of teaching with digital storytelling for the first time. Thanks to each of them for their time and energy at each stage of the pilot.

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#12apps – Changing the way we create

The iPod is 10 years old this fall and most of us can remember the first time we ever picked one up. The smooth action of the scroll wheel with the slight click as you moved through albums or artists. In 2001, the iPod seemed like the evolution of the music player–less hard drive than box of wonder–but for its first few generations the iPod remained a one-way street. Your computer sent music to the device and the iPod sent it to your ears.

So much has changed with media players in the last decade, but perhaps the most important is the two-way expressways they’ve become. We’re as likely to record a track as listen to one, and the addition of better optics and HD cameras have only expanded the role of the iPod and now the iPhone as a mobile media production studio.

The App Store is teaming with media creation apps, but these are the best of breed.

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#4 – GarageBand

Apple re-imagined audio production for the touch interface. GarageBand brings smart instruments to the iPad and the iPhone to support performers of all skill levels. It also packs an 8-track recorder and mixer for editing together an interview or electric guitar solo quickly. When you’re done, the app can export high-quality audio files or bring your tracks into GarageBand back on your Mac for further editing.

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#5 – Filterstorm or Filterstorm Pro

The quality of the camera now on the iPhone with the sudden explosion of photo sharing sites have encouraged app developers to move beyond seeing this as a basic camera-phone. Apps like Filterstorm bring together the combination clean interfaces with advanced tools to approximate Photoshop Elements on a mobile platform. The Pro version is iPad only but–combined with the iPad camera connection kit–provides opportunities to get some real work done on the road.

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#6 – iMovie

Since video first came to the iPhone on the 3GS, student filmmakers have been exploring ways to shoot music videos and short films on it. Now with the processing power of the iPhone 4, 4GS, and iPad 2, editing and basic visual effects are also possible on a mobile device. Like GarageBand, iMovie allows you to record content directly into the app, bring in DRM-free music from your library, and cut together a movie with basic edits and transitions. When you’re finished, the app makes it easy to upload to YouTube or Facebook, and with video mirroring to play it on a local TV.

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#7 – ReelDirector

This is an alternate movie editor compatible with all versions of iOS device. It provides most of the same features now found in iMovie but does allow access to DRM and DRM-free music from your library. Both apps also provide a platform for creating narrated slideshows or digital storytelling projects quickly and easily.

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Free(ish) Essentials

Though our #12apps giveaways will focus on paid apps, there are a few free apps that provide additional capabilities to your photo, audio, or video projects.

PhotoSynth – quick and easy way to produce mobile panoramas, though app doesn’t currently produce “synths”

Instagram – simple way to share immediate photos with followers, often with some retro-analog style

Camera+ ($0.99) – nice upgrade to basic camera app, with shooting scenes and a timer

8mm Vintage Camera ($1.99) – basically Instagram for video with an analog, old-school look

#12apps – Changing the way we begin

We often focus on how technology is transforming the way we share finished ideas with a global audience. Easily overlooked is the role they now play on the other end of the creative process. When many of us are ready to begin a project, sketch out an idea, or draft a few paragraphs, mobile apps are now the tools we turn to first.

Here are a few of our favorites.

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#1 – Pages

Apple’s iWork app was among the first mobile tools to expand our view of how a desktop application could be adapted to a mobile device. Pages is more than a bare-bones word processing app. Document templates, text styles, find/replace, and editing tools all made the mobile version as well.

The app is easy to work with on an iPhone or iPad, but version 1.5 added iCloud integration which makes it that much easier to pick up where you left off on your computer or second device.

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#2 – Notes Plus

The first of two iPad only apps we’ll start with, tablets are emerging as a third platform with particular needs and benefits. A tablet is far easier to take into a meeting or class for occasional notes. Notes Plus makes efficient use of zooming to make efficient use of a page with handwritten notes and adds the ability to record audio associated with a particular page or notebook.

Stylus recommended, but if you prefer to type, Notes Plus lets you blend handwriting and sketches with typed text.

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#3 – Whiteboard HD

One other iPad only app we’re offering this week offers the best way to sketch out ideas quickly, whether individually or as a group. You may have noticed we have a certain fondness for whiteboards in the LS—with 12 of them in our group rooms and another 16 rolling around upstairs. Most ideas don’t appear neatly organized into clear paragraphs or strong images without some work. A whiteboard gives you the space to see how an idea takes shape before beginning to focus it into some final shape.

Whiteboard HD also allows you to project it on an external monitor in a classroom or collaboration room using an iPad VGA adapter. This spring we’ll also be experimenting with an Apple TV in the Screening Room for wireless video mirroring from an iPad or iPhone.

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Free Essentials

Though our #12apps giveaways will focus on paid apps, there are a few free apps we consider essential to basic productivity around campus.

Dropbox – great app for keeping 2gb of files synced across devices and your desktop

Evernote – the standard “digital brain” for capturing and remembering almost anything

SimpleMind+ – a strong mind-mapping app for developing idea maps on an iPhone or iPad

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So what’s missing?

We’d love to hear from you in comments. What apps do you turn to when it’s time to begin a project?

#12apps before Christmas

The Learning Studio is heralding the holiday season with 12 days of giveaways. For the first 12 days of December, we’re giving away our favorite 12 apps with an assortment of gear to brighten the final days of the semester.
*Details below for how to enter.

 How To Enter

All ACU students, faculty, and staff may enter by following @learningstudio on Twitter or liking  ACUlearningstudio on Facebook. That’s it.

Additional opportunities to enter will be announced on Twitter and Facebook each day, and all entries from previous days will remain in the contest through Dead Day, Dec. 12th.

Drawings will be made at random once a day with winners contacted by Twitter/Facebook. All prizes need to be picked up within 24 hours of notification at the main desk in the Learning Studio before they’re thrown back in the prize pool.

We’ve had a great first full semester working with you on campus, and this is our way of saying thanks. Good luck.