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Video can be a compelling instructional medium when used appropriately and created so the video is high quality and accessible to students at Boise State. The guidelines below help to provide the campus community with benchmarks and tools to create consistent, high quality, accessible, and simple, user-friendly instructional video content.

Instructions

Before You Begin

What is your instructional intent or learning objective using video? What can video provide that other media can not? Talk to an instructional design consultant in the IDEA Shop or eCampus Center for online classes about why you might use video for instruction.

The Guidelines

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Boise State instructors should use instructional content in ways that enrich the learning experience by being aligned with instructional objectives and are informed by current research literature/best practices. The following guidelines should assist you in the creation and presentation of high-quality and accessible instructional video content. There may be additional federal and/or Boise State requirements for creating and using instructional video in your classes depending

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on how and where you use instructional video

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Instructional Content

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Instructional Content Guidelines


GuidelineDescription and How-To Information
Videos should be co-located along with other instructional content.Embed or provide links to instructional video inline with instructional content. This helps contextualize video content for your students. If you embed the video in your Blackboard , also provide a link to the video so students can copy/paste the link to view the video in a browser.

Chunk your content into specific topics and succinct videos.Ideally, each video will focus on one topic. Chunk content into short videos--the shorter the better (try for under five minutes). If you video is longer than five minutes, can the content be split into two videos? Shorter videos not only allow students easy access to specific video content, these also playback more easily on mobile devices and over slow Internet connections.
Provide a content listing, bookmarks or links to specific content sections in your videos.If you must post a video longer than five minutes, provide a table of contents, links or bookmarks to specific sections within your video.
    • How to: Link to a specific point in a video posted to YouTube by selecting the "Start at" checkbox next to the share link under the "Share" tab. You'll see the link change with the timeline. Simply, select the link at the point in time you want to link to.

    • How to: To link to a specific point in a Classroom Capture video, navigate to the point in the video you want to link to, click the "Share" button and select "Video at current time."
Students engage with video content produced with enthusiastic inflection and slightly faster-than-normal speaking rate.
Students engage more with visually stimulating videos.Try producing your video content using "Khan-style" videos where the speaker is drawing on a tablet as opposed to fixed slides with a lot of text. Your video should "show" something.

While Classroom Capture (lecture capture) videos can provide a review resource for students, these should not be considered as instructional video to be used for primary instruction.If you want to use videos to "flip" your classroom so that students receive information before coming into the classroom, create short videos on specific topics and share these with students before class.

    • Contact your instructional design consultant in the IDEA shop or eCampus Center for online classes to create ways to best utilize video in your class
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Accessibility

As part of instructional curriculum, all instructional videos should follow universal design in education principles.

Students requiring accommodation, or instructors needing consultation, should contact the Boise State Disability Resource Center at 208-426-1583 or drcinfo@boisestate.edu. Discover more about the accommodation process on the students page of the DRC website.

Accessibility Guidelines

Universal Design has been applied to many educational products (computers, websites, software, textbooks and lab equipment) and environments (dormitories, classrooms, student union buildings, libraries and distance learning courses). Unlike an accommodation for a specific person with a disability, the practice of Universal Design in Education benefits all students, including those who are not receiving disability-related accommodations from the school.

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    • Students should contact the Disability Resource Center for accommodations.
    • Tip: When reviewing instructional video for use in your classes, purchase videos that are already close captioned.

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    • For deaf/hearing impaired, provide a verbatim written transcript.
    • For blind/low vision, provide a descriptive, written transcript where actions and all relevant visual and auditory clues and actions are described.
    • Example: In a video for math, describe the action and location of X and Y, not simply say, "move the 'X' over here."
    • How to: In Blackboard, simply upload your transcript and include the link to the transcript along with your video.

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Quality

Your videos should be audible and look as good as possible.

Quality Guidelines

The TechSmith website provides tutorials and tips on how to make your videos look and sound as professional as possible. Visit the TechSmith software tutorial pages for information on using Camtasia Studio/for Mac.

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Technical

Instructional videos should be produced in formats that are accessible on multiple devices and multiple bandwidth rates.

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    • How To: In Camtasia Studio or Camtasia for Mac, select "Produce and Share" and select "MP4 only (up to 1080p)" option. You will then be prompted to save your video file--save it somewhere you will be able to find it like your desktop.

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Branding

While it is not required that instructional videos follow Boise State video branding guidelines, including the logo and official colors in your instructional videos provide a more polished and professional look to your videos.

Branding Guidelines

Visit the Boise State video branding guidelines website for complete guidelines. Here are a couple of easy ways to brand your video as Boise State content.
Branding Guidelines
Include the Boise State logo at the beginning and end of your video.Visit the Boise State Brand Standards website for official colors and to download logos
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