Making Lesson Recap Videos with Screencastify

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Making video recaps of my lessons has revolutionized my teaching. I am so grateful to Chris Aviles for suggesting it at EdCamp New Jersey. A parent told me she wishes every teacher made video recaps. A learning support teacher uses them to help my students study in her instructional support classes. Students who need multiple opportunities to learn and absent students benefit the most from video lesson recaps.

I have documented how I use SnagIt to make recaps on my Chromebook. SnagIt met my needs until it had a problem with static in March 2015. I researched and found that Screencastify does essentially the same thing. Screencastify is an extension for the Google Chrome browser so it works an any computer with the browser.

Watch this video where I discuss how I use Screencastify:

After installing the extension…

Screenshot 2015-04-02 at 1.26.35 PM

Before starting the recording be sure “Desktop” is selected and “Embed webcam” is not.

Screenshot 2015-04-02 at 1.29.36 PM

“Desktop” makes sure Screencastify captures the entire screen. “Embed wecam” puts a small webcam in the lower right corner of the screen when you screencast. I prefer to open the computer’s webcam and size the window to my liking.

When you stop recording, Screencastify puts the video file in a Google Drive folder.

Screenshot 2015-04-02 at 1.33.33 PM

Screenshot 2015-04-02 at 1.40.34 PM

Screenshot 2015-04-02 at 1.42.35 PM

Overall, I have been thrilled with Screencastify. Its file sizes are roughly 10-20MB per minute. That is much lower than SnagIt-made video files. This saves me time when uploading videos to YouTube. If you do not want to be on YouTube, share the video in Google Drive with your students. The small file sizes mean less bandwith used when multiple students view it in your classroom.

Video lesson recaps have tremendously benefited my students. I am happy to share this strategy far and wide. Please be in touch if you want to discuss further!

11 responses to “Making Lesson Recap Videos with Screencastify”

  1. Jesse McNulty Avatar
    Jesse McNulty

    Reblogged this on Blended Learning 1.0 and commented:
    Screencastify has been a wonderful Chrome application to use when creating video clips from textbook examples, providing directions or cues, and also for directions for students when substitutes have class for the day!

    Like

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  7. Karen Savella Avatar
    Karen Savella

    Love your video and explanation, but I cannot make Screencastify film me and the desktop simultaneously. What am I doing differently from you?

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    1. tommullaney Avatar

      Karen, are you using a Chromebook? If so, resize the browser window and then bring up the camera app. When you see the Screencastify drop-down, make sure you choose “Desktop.” The default is “Tab.” Does that help?

      Like

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