Move your lessons up a gear with Movenote

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It's said that people's number one fear is not actually dying; it's public speaking! I, myself, break out in cold sweat when having to speak in L1 in front of an audience - imagine how daunting it is for students to have to speak publicly in a language they don't usually communicate in. This is what is referred to as foreign language apprehension, which I believe is perfectly reasonable as when speaking face-to-face, students have to think on their feet with only split-second processing time. Linguistic, pragmatic and strategic competence all come into play simultaneously - this is a lot of pressure thrust upon students, especially those with timid dispositions. Even more when students live in regions where English is not used in daily interactions, the English lesson is basically the only platform for them to practice. This is where Movenote, a  handy presentation recording tool, steps in to allow more individualised practice and thinking time, rehearsal and repetition to formulate ideas, and not to mention, self-assessment.



Why use Movenote in my English lesson?

Although slightly limited in terms of video-editing affordances in comparison to Camtasia or Screencast-o-matic, the pedagogical potential for using Movenote in the English lesson is worth looking into. One reason to use this asynchronous CMC tool is that it gives a reason for students to use the target language outside of the classroom. Asking students to keep a video diary about their day, getting them to explain about a favourite music video or retell past experiences using their own photos provide that urgency or interest to actually speak up. As we know, people generally have a lot to say about themselves and they enjoy sharing to others. Students can  upload these videos into their class blog, Moodle or a Padlet and exchange comments - giving them an actual purpose to talk and real addressees (essential for practicing discourse competence). If you're managing large classes where students don't receive equal chances to speak and monitoring in class, try getting students to record their answers at home.

Another reason is the opportunity for students to rehearse, restructure, reflect on and modify speech at their own pace until they are satisfied with it. Students can keep the trade-off between fluency and accuracy at a low, as they have time to focus on their language as well as keeping a conversational speech flow. Having the internet to access information, dictionary resources and pronunciation models is great input for brainstorming and formulating students' own speech, in turn reshaping their interlanguage (all good traits of autonomous learners!). What about prepared or scripted talks? I suppose reading aloud from a script rather than directly speaking into the camera has its merits: focused attention on pronunciation and intonation. On top of that, when the speaking task is personalised and emotion-provoking, the script will be student-made reflecting their own personal views. For example, you can ask students to pick out a photograph from today's newspaper and talk about it, or respond affectively to pictures of social problems happening in their context (city or country), the Paraolympic games, and the like.

A flipped classroom approach is definitely doable with Movenote because of its really simple and straightforward functions. You can easily record yourself presenting a simple theory or a task that students can ponder on at home before coming into class. Movenote's features that appeal to me most are:
  1. You can  record a presentation with or without showing a video of yourself. After uploading your document (ppt, pdf or picture) you can choose to disable the camera, and start recording with only audio -- For students, it's good to have the option not to show their faces if they're generally shy.
  2. The highlighter function lets you direct viewer's attention to parts of your presentation just like a real laser pointer would do. You simply hold the mouse and the cursor changes into red dotted lights. 
  3. The Pause button lets users temporarily stop a recording and resume with ease. This is useful when you or your students need time to think about what to say next. However, when I think about it, we'd most probably start over from the beginning as the shift would be quite noticeable. 
  4. The Start Over button lets users erase all recording done and begin with a clean slate. Although  it's convenient to begin again from scratch after making mistakes, it tempts you to stop and keep starting over for fixing minor errors - this could get a bit time consuming and borderline obsessive for perfection.
  5. All the video recordings made will be archived. You can keep record of the videos for sequential modules, or keep track of students' speaking improvement throughout the study period.
  6. Viewer statistics lets you know how many times your video has been seen, giving you an overview of whether students actually take a look at it before class if you're opting for a flipped classroom approach.
  7. You can reply to the maker of the video personally. Because viewer statistics only provide a broad description of how many and through which method (url or embedding) the video is played, we can't exactly pinpoint which students haven't accessed it. If in the video, students are required to give a certain response after viewing, the Reply function for both text or video message ensures that students' actually process the content. 
  8. In the case of poor internet connection, the videos are downloadable and can be played offline in the form of .mp4. 
Take a quick glimpse of Movenote through this short video I retrieved from MovenoteYoutube channel:



What are the limitations of using this tool?

Keeping in mind that Movenote is not for screencapturing (rather you upload content and record yourself talking about it), this tool is pretty comprehensive and clearcut. Despite of this, be on the lookout for these downsides:

  • the sound tends to be a bit faint although it might be my microphone (:
  • the highlight function is unstable. Sometimes where you point to when making the video gets shifted in the finished product.
  • no way to preview the video before finalising it (you can only see the end-product after clicking Done which takes quite a while to finalise)
  • no editing features apart from reordering or deleting uploaded content
  • no undo button
  • ads in the presentation for free version


If you take a look at my example down here, you'll see that I've used Movenote for a short storytelling. The story is called Monkey's Paw originally written by W.W. Jacobs. I used visuals from a wonderful Youtube video created by Ricky Lewis Jr. and script adaptations by Palm Beach Schools. Here I ask the students to predict the ending of the story. Their predictions will be submitted through a video reply message to the teacher - all done on Movenote.

Do you think Movenote will appeal to your students? Why not give it a shot.

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2 comments

  1. Hey Priska - what an unbelievably thorough, detailed, and highly enjoyable piece. I think you hit the 1,500 word limit in one post ;) I'm a massive fan of this tool as it's so easy to just pick it up and go. You really managed to present the how and why of Movenote which is what most teachers want to know. You could get some really good, and useful, back and forth going between teacher and student with this tool, which would be really beneficial for the latter. Gary

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    Replies
    1. Thanks for your kind words, Gary! Yes, the reply button is a really cool feature to facilitate that two-way interaction, both teacher-learner and learner-learner.

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