In the spring, I usually complete a Titanic unit with my 6th grade English students. I created an Animoto video for my class website that showcases some of my favorite Titanic fiction books. To tell the story, I selected a navy blue theme to create a cool feeling. Paired with "Moonlight Sonata," the mood of my movie matches the somberness of the disaster. Overall, I found the website very easy to use, and I was able to create a movie rather quickly. There were many themes to choose from as well as background songs. If you are the type of person who likes to create everything from scratch, you may become frustrated with this site along with it's 30 second time limit for free accounts. I'd like to create more book recommendation Animotos similar to this for each of the units I teach.
PowtoonPowtoon was my favorite of all of the websites I explored this week. However, I found it very time consuming. I am the type of person who obsesses over details in multimedia projects, and after an hour, I only had about 15 seconds. Most of this time was spent learning how to use the program. Animoto was much easier for me to use, but I liked the special features of Powtoon better, especially the trendy hands; however, I became frustrated when some of the the special effects I was trying to create were not falling into place as they should. I would give students the opportunity to use Powtoon for a class project, such as creating an advertisement. I have a class website, and I could also use Powtoon for my set induction as a way to introduce a concept or essential question.
Pixiclip
I was fascinated with Pixiclip for about five minutes. My biggest complaint with Pixiclip is not being able to go forwards and backwards through a video. There is also no preview available, so you can't see your video until after you've published it. And once published, you can't go back and edit. That being said, I can see this as easy way for students to create a podcast/vodcast. I like the idea of using Pixiclip to introduce a writing prompt. I watched a video of a person using Pixiclip to give directions by using a map. I thought I could build an activity such as that into a lesson on prepositions.
Web-Based
Apps