Conceptual Change (KAT) Differentiation (KAT) Lesson Preparation Personalisation (KAT) Scaffolding (KAT) Annotation Creating Animation / Interactive Video Description
MoocNote is a free tool for adding time-stamped comments, links, and questions to videos. You can also use MoocNote's video player interface to add notes to your videos. All of your notes link back to the appropriate place in the videos and are collected into one central place which you can access anytime, anywhere. Now, premium membership is free during the beta period for a limited number of users.
Note:
MoocNote does not create a copy of the video. They store only the video URL and so if the video is no longer accessible, then MoocNote will not able to play it. However you can still access your notes.
How it works
With MoocNote, the video automatically stops when you type, and you can grab text when the video is stopped. An added feature of MoocNote is that you can extract the text from the video simply by copying and pasting them right into your notes.
The following video sources are supported:
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YouTube video
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YouTube playlist
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Dropbox video
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OneDrive video
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OneDrive folder
Features- Usage statistics
- Formatting notes
- All notes are organized in one single place
- Importing videos from YouTube, OneDrive or Dropbox
- Take synchronized notes on videos with automatic screen capture, drawing on the video, copy text from the video
Affordances- Track student progress
- Share video with guests without an account
- Add quizzes to videos and receive feedback
- Grab text from video and paste it into your notes in editable format
- Select friends, classmates or family members to share your videos with and receive feedback
Limitations- Free account only support up to 100 videos
- Free account is unable to export doc, and ppt format
- Free account is unable to support automatic screen capture, draw on screenshot, grab text from video and import private videos
Educator Usage
MoocNote can be a good tool to use to create informal flipped video lessons. You can create a group that your students join then share a video with them that they take notes on while watching it. You might consider making multiple groups within a class then have each group watch a similar, but different video on a topic. Then have your students compare notes on that topic.
Platforms SupportedLatest version of Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Safari browers / MoocNote for Chrome Extension
Other Resources Screenshot