Rachel
Burnham writes: I have a love/hate relationship with podcasts
– actually that is way too strong! I can
see the value of podcasts; I frequently recommend them and build them into
programmes I’m designing; and sometimes
I even listen to them myself – but I don’t really find them an effective way of
learning personally. I can listen to
comedy podcasts fine and I can certainly listen to jazz based podcasts with
great enjoyment and attention, but when it comes to business podcasts all that
goes out the window. I get distracted; I
start clock-watching – ‘Are we really only 8 minutes into a 20 minute
programme?’; I instantly forget what is being discussed; and if the podcast is
good it gets me thinking, I start chasing that thought and then lose my place
in the broadcast. On many occasions I
don’t even make it through the whole podcast!
But
what is a podcast?
If you haven’t come across the term ‘podcast’ before, it
refers to a digital audio-recording and is a bit like a short radio programme,
except that they are usually available via the internet. They can be a one-off programme, but many are
produced as part of a regular series and can be subscribed to, so that every
time a new one is ‘broadcast’ your phone or tablet or PC receives it. Just like a radio programme, a podcast can be
a single person talking, an interview, a panel discussion or a whole mix of
segments. There is no reason why they
can’t involve drama or music too – although these are less frequent components
of business podcasts. Podcasts can be
used as part of corporate communications or as a learning resource and are
particularly suited to being accessed from mobile devices. They are relatively cheap and easy to produce
and so can be a valuable option for L&D.
I
love to read
But for myself, I prefer to read. I love to read and have done since I was a
child. Even though I struggled to learn to
read, I always loved books. With books
you can have pictures and diagrams. With
books you can read at your own pace, pause at any point to think more about
what you’ve read, easily go back and re-read a section or jump forward to a
more interesting page. And you get to
hold them and smell them. I am a proper
bookworm and I read to the end of the book. I do love to read!
The
experiment
So, when we started to explore the use and creation of
podcasts as an L&D resource, during the ‘E-learning: Beyond the Next
Button’ year-long MOOC that I am studying with Curatr this year, I was
intrigued and slightly embarrassed about my own lack of enthusiasm for
podcasts. Eventually, during a Twitter Chat
(#LTMOOC16) I owned up to my reservations.
As I shared them, I noticed that they sounded very like the sorts of
comments, I often hear from people who don’t like reading – they get
distracted, they forget what they have read, it doesn’t go in, it seems
endless. In this situation, I have often
recommended highlighting key points, adding your own notes linking the material
to your own experience or mind-mapping to summarise what you have read. So I
decided to take my own advice and try this sort of strategy with podcasts
myself. As I like Sketchnoting, I decide
to experiment with sketchnoting whilst listening to some podcasts and see if this made a
difference to my experience with podcasts.
So over the last fortnight, I have listened to three
different podcasts and created a Sketchnote for each one. The three podcasts were from different
sources and in each case, I sketchnoted as I listened. The three podcasts were:
‘Communities of Practice and Showing your Work’ a Good
Practice podcast 13 September 2016
‘Curating & Sharing Knowledge’ a CIPD ToolClicks
podcast featuring Martin Couzins
‘Neuroscience & the Organisation’ a Learning Now
Radio podcast featuring Amy Brann 2nd June 2016
By comparison, I have probably only listened to about
three podcasts in the past year prior to this fortnight (excluding jazz related
podcasts).
Did
it make a difference?
I felt that Sketchnoting made a huge difference to my
experience. In all three cases, I felt that I
had a much clearer sense of what the podcast was about – I could picture it.
I actually enjoyed listening to the podcasts and was
still attentive at the end of each one – this is a major breakthrough for
me.
When listening to the middle
podcast, I was interrupted by family members who came to chat and by a phone
call, but because I was Sketchnoting, it was easy to find my place again and
pick up the thread by looking at my picture.
In the past, I probably would have used the interruption of the phone
call as a reason to give up on the podcast and not complete it.
From previous experience of Sketchnoting, I know that I
do refer back to Sketchnotes that I have produced to remind me of key points
and that they do work to jog my memory.
It helps that I have them altogether, in a bound notebook and so it is
easy to find these notes. It is
interesting that I hardly ever referred back to more traditionally made
notes, except when doing a formal course and I have needed to for an assessment or
exam.
So, although three podcasts is a small sample, I do feel
that Sketchnoting has improved my ability to listen effectively to a podcast
and has as a result changed how I feel about podcasts for the better.
If you haven’t listened to any podcasts before why not
give it ago. All three of the podcasts I
listened to are part of series and there are many others available for free via
ITunes.
Rachel
Burnham
25/9/16
Burnham L & D Consultancy helps L&D
professionals become even more effective.
I am particularly interested in blended learning, the uses of social
media for learning, evaluation and anything that improves the impact of
learning on performance.
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