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’ The book was an inspiration and encouragement for those us whose inner critics have been keeping us away from using the technique in front of other people. The book offers a wonderful road map for a learning journey to internalize these techniques and I’ve practicing a lot.
We’ve all heard the saying, “practice makes perfect.” The main benefit of practice is to increase your familiarity of a given task. Here’s one of my storyboards: Creating this storyboard helps me feel comfortable that I know the major points I want to cover and still leaves me plenty of time to rehearse and perfect slides.
I use a technique I learned from Jay Dedman called “Moment Capture&# where you get the most enlightening snippet. I usually reserve video capture for a special story or moment that absolutely can’t be told with text. If the latter, I have a storyboard in my head and edit as I go. Click to play.
As Stephen Downes notes, being a super learner takes time and practice. about his editing process for a screencast that uses this interview technique. I got enough information to put together an outline and rough storyboard So, I had the overall structure for the 15 minute screencast. I recently read a blog entry by Jon Udell.
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