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The following information is credited to Rachel Tunstall and Catherine Leyland. They are both learning technologists in the Leicester Learning Institute in Leicester, UK. The original article can be found here.
Benefits For Students
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A lecture may be complex and difficult to understand
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If your lecture covers new terminology and/or complicated material which must be remembered, it is an enormous help to students to be able to play back the lecture at their own pace and look again at specific topics they may not have fully understood the first time round.
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Lecture capture can be a useful back up to the notes distributed and be used selectively when wanting to revisit a topic.
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Students may not speak English natively
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Students may have trouble note-taking
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If a student has a disability they may find it difficult to listen to a lecture, process the information, and make notes at the same time. A lecture recording provides an audio and visual record which students can repeat as many times as they need. Any part of a lecture can be found easily and played back. It also means an electronic version of the lecture is stored, so it is not a problem if handwritten notes are lost.
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Students are unable to ask all the questions they would like to
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In some lectures attendance numbers are very large, which means not all students will have the chance to ask questions, or they may feel inhibited from asking questions in front of such a large group.
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Distance learning students
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Review
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Different learning styles
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Not the only source of information
Benefits For Faculty
- Recording lectures can help you to improve your teaching.
- Feedback from the University of Leicester and other institutions (Karnad 2011, Woo et al. 2008) shows that students find recordings of lectures particularly useful when:
- They do not speak English natively.
- They have trouble keeping up with taking notes (for example, students with dyslexia).
- The lectures cover new terminology and/or complicated material which must be remembered.
- Attendance numbers in lectures are so large that students cannot ask all the questions they would like to ask.
- Students are distance-only and would like to see and hear their tutors and lecturers speak about the topic.