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david-noel:

Do you sometimes stumble across words you really like and you want to save them somewhere so you can use them in the future? Is it the sound of it, the word itself, the context?

It happens to me a lot so I started a SoundCloud group to collect recordings of my favorite words. I’d like to make it a collaborative effort so please join me so we can all learn and discover new words to like. Can we get to 100 favorite words by the end of December?

You in? Easy:

  1. Log in to your SoundCloud account and go to this group’s DropBox
  2. Hit the Record button, say the word and add context if you like
  3. For the title of the recording, use the format: File Under: Favorite Words - <The Word>

To find out what my first contribution is, listen to this audio message.

An archive with recordings of your favorite words. Join the fun!

Reblogged 1 year ago from david-noel

Tyson Seburn of Coursetree is a English language teacher based out of Toronto, Canada. He reached out to us via Twitter linking to a blog post he wrote about a presentation he did at the Virtual Round Table Conference where he talked about the way he uses SoundCloud for his courses.
This is a really fantastic use case for sound in education and Tyson does an amazing job at diving deep into specific examples of how SoundCloud has been of value to him and his students.
If you&#8217;re working in education, make sure to watch the recorded presentation including slides here and check his blog post for more details and inspiration.
Thanks for sending this along, Tyson, and keep up the great work!

Tyson Seburn of Coursetree is a English language teacher based out of Toronto, Canada. He reached out to us via Twitter linking to a blog post he wrote about a presentation he did at the Virtual Round Table Conference where he talked about the way he uses SoundCloud for his courses.

This is a really fantastic use case for sound in education and Tyson does an amazing job at diving deep into specific examples of how SoundCloud has been of value to him and his students.

If you’re working in education, make sure to watch the recorded presentation including slides here and check his blog post for more details and inspiration.

Thanks for sending this along, Tyson, and keep up the great work!