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Difference between revisions of "Course Videos"

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== Course Video ==
 
== Course Video ==

Revision as of 16:44, 28 December 2018


Course Video

The course video in Widgets Inc. is at a near-authentic language level, and serves several purposes in the context of the course:

1. It models language and situations for students. This is especially true of the sample task videos, in which the stage tasks are literally performed. Lower language proficiency students may want to follow these models almost word-for-word by modifying to the script, but higher proficiency students should be able to look at them as simply one possible way of doing things. In fact, the latter group may want to discuss the good and bad points of these task videos – certainly none is 100% flawless!

2. It helps to develop the authentic context of the course simulation. That is, it helps make the students "feel" like they are in a real workplace. This is why we have added certain features in the video which you may not expect (for example, Titus having recurring technical problems). Another aspect of authenticity is that the characters display a certain degree of realistic personality, both good and bad aspects. Like any of us, students should feel free to like or dislike the boss, but at least it should feel like they are 3-dimensional human beings rather than simplistic caricatures.

3. It provides opportunities for discussion, note-taking, and other classroom activity. This is especially true of the conference-call videos in which "the boss" is addressing the teams directly. It is important to bear in mind that students are not required to understand the videos 100%. They are meant to watch, take notes, then turn to each other and ask, "What did the boss say?", "What does she want us to do next?", and so on. In other words, the immediate post-viewing activity, ideally, is one in which students are working together to try to reconstruct the message. (After this, of course, the teacher could then focus on language aspects, direct students to read the script, watch again to reinforce, and so on.)


Streaming

S1header.png

Stage 1

Video 1: [COMING SOON] Welcome to Widgets (p. 5)

Video 2: Water cooler chat - 3 examples (p. 8)

Video 3: Meet the founders (p. 9)


S2header.png

Stage 2

Video 4: Jessica's R&D project intro (p. 15)

Video 5: Elevator pitch example (p. 22)


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Stage 3

Video 6: [COMING SOON] SWOT analysis (p. 28)

Video 7: Titus' product selection intro (p. 29)

Video 8: Poster presentation example (p. 35)


S4header.png

Stage 4

Video 9: Titus' market research intro (p. 42)

Video 10: [COMING SOON] Focus group (p. 45)


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Stage 5

Video 11: Miki's marketing project intro (p. 58)

Video 12: [COMING SOON] Ad campaign presentation (p. 62)


S6header.png

Stage 6

Video 13: [COMING SOON] Final message from the founders (p. 73)

Video 14: [COMING SOON] Job interview (p. 80)


Download

To download Widgets videos to your device:

1) Select the video from the streaming list below;

2) At the top-right side of the video player, click on the "Share" icon (it looks like a paper airplane);

3) Click on the URL which points to the video on vimeo.com;

4) Once at the Vimeo page, look for the "Download" button.

If you do download the videos, please check back here at the end of February 2019, as we are still finishing post-production on some of the videos. Even the ones that are now available below may be slightly updated.


User Videos

We encourage teachers (with appropriate permissions) to upload videos of their students successfully performing tasks. Eventually, as the wiki grows, we hope to begin categorizing these as examples at different CEFR levels (A1-C2).

Video files cannot be uploaded directly to this wiki. They need to be linked or embedded from a streaming source such as Vimeo or YouTube. If you have a sample video you wish to share, but don't know how to do this, please contact us.