Podcasting
–Johnny Appleseed
“Type a quote here.”
flickr photo by Mingo.nl http://flickr.com/photos/mjhagen/2133732967 shared under a Creative Commons (BY) license
Episodic content, usually audio, delivered via RSS. Frequently downloaded and played in an application like
Overcast, Instacast, iTunes.
Most also post episodes on their website where you can listen without subscribing, which makes it easier to get
started.
flickr photo by clgregor http://flickr.com/photos/clark/64963419 shared under a Creative Commons (BY) license
Podcasts might all use the same technology to deliver episodes, but they aren’t all the same
Some examples
Size and Scale
There is a market. The “public radio” shows like Serial and This American Life are the largest presence with millions
of subscribers.
Hello Internet has ~120,000 listeners and four ads per episode ($6,000 per), they also receive 2,600 per episode
via Patreon.
That ain’t bad. There is space for your voice.
edtech.fm
Who? So far…• Autumm Caines, Associate Director for Academic
Technology at Capital
• Nicole Kraft, Assistance Professor - Clinical, School of Communication
• Byron Roush, Director of EdTech at Social Work
• Cory Tressler, Associate Director, Learning Programs ODEE
• We have OSU people, but it is not an OSU podcast.
Why?• Opinions: I have some and so do my co-hosts.
• Interest is discussing where edtech is/is going.
• Seeking a way to discuss important topics with a broader community.
By the Numbers• Listeners: Not many
• Revenue: None
• Costs: Minimal
Resources• podcastmethod.co, a website and a podcast
• edtech.fm:
• Listen to episodes 2 and 6 at least. Make me happy. They’re all pretty good though.
• Start podcasting yourself
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