How to use your cell phone for education: Mobile podcasting
July 7, 2008
I know, we’ve all seen ugly examples of cell phones being used to message in class, start fights, and film teachers behaving badly, BUT you can use cell phones for the forces of good in education. I’ve recently upgraded my cell phone to a “smarter” model, so I’m discovering lots of cool things, many of which are not limited to smart models.
Instructify has compiled a list of educational uses for your cell phone. Today we’ll look at how to turn your phone into a mobile podcasting studio.
Mobile podcasting (recording audio from your cell phone) is great on field trips, or any time you’re away from your computer. To get started, you’ll first need to find a podcasting service.
Services to use:
-
Record by phone with Gabcast.com -Use your cell to call Gabcast’s toll-free number and start talking. It’ll save your call as a podcast, which you can upload to your blog or website. Gabcast lets you record conference calls, too, so you can do remote interviews, or get your whole class involved.
- Gcast – Another service we’ve previously reviewed that lets you call their toll-free number to record your podcast
How and why:
Still not sure about this podcasting stuff? Check out these links to see how other teachers are using mobile podcasts in their classrooms.
- Intelligenic » Post Topic » Kidcast 53 – Podcasting and Fieldtrips
- Wendy Goodwin of R.A. Mitchell Elementary School in Gadsden, Alabama students’ GCAST podcasts about their field trip to Space Camp in Huntsville Alabama
- Wes Fryer shows how to do it
Hopefully now you have an idea of how to use your phone for podcasting. Next time we’ll talk about how to use your cell to take photos and record videos for class. -ALICE MERCER
Related Stuff:
Sound Field Trip Advice from Kidcast
¿Como se dice Podcast? ESL Pod
Gcast: We Don’t Need No Stinking Microphones!
Tune In: Education Podcasting Network
Photo credit: Steve Roe on flickr

The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill is in the process of launching
No longer will you take hours and hours to put together picture presentations for Open House, awards ceremonies, or end-of-the-year graduations. Liven up any presentation with the use of
Do your students need help pronouncing a tricky or unfamiliar word while doing research? Or are you an ESL teacher helping kids with their English pronunciation. If you use Firefox (and you definitely should), you should add the
Whether you’re creating a podcast or adding a voice over for a slide show, the list of free audio recorders begins and ends with
The only specific memory I have of a field trip I took as a student was an elementary school trip to the local planetarium. Why? Because it was the first time I experienced astronaut ice cream. It tasted like regular ice cream…but…it was crunchy…??!! My mind was blown.
Do you struggle to explain Web 2.0 to interested but clueless administrators? Social networking, blogging and podcasting can be tough to describe to the uninitiated. If you need succinct explanations of social media to convince your principal to open the school’s firewall for you, show him or her a video by
f you’ve never read Sun Tzu’s Art of War, do yourself a favor and read it now, online, for free. 
Whether you’re an ESL teacher looking for a new way to teach English or a student of the language,
With all the hubbub about the
Missing class terrifies many teachers. Not to knock brave substitute teachers – they’re in an unwinnable situation where they have to walk into unfamiliar territory and try to teach a subject they may or may not know. Still, when you get back, you know you’ll have to play catch-up to get your class back on schedule.
Cassette tapes have gone the way of the dodo, to say the least, but that doesn’t mean you have to let those mix tapes disintegrate into oblivion. With this helpful
