[RNLD] Recording apps for recording telephone calls....

Cat Kutay cat.kutay at gmail.com
Tue May 5 23:44:44 UTC 2020


Dear Heather

These resources are a great opportunity in an otherwise bleak time. They will make a great resource
With a land phone on speaker you can use a recorder (even a mobile phone as recorder)
Story and annotating this material for later use is not easy, but it is something worth working on as a resource for any language. Just a simple website and/or app to upload from phone would do, and material could stay hidden to just that contributor.
Fulcrum is a developer of app accessed databases that might be useful.

Kind regards,
 |\ /|
=o=
 \  /
Cat Kutay
0418 455 089


From: Peter Austin <pa2 at soas.ac.uk>
Date: Sunday, 3 May 2020 at 6:45 am
To: Heather souter <hsouter at gmail.com>
Cc: "r-n-l-d at lists.unimelb.edu.au" <r-n-l-d at lists.unimelb.edu.au>
Subject: Re: [RNLD] Recording apps for recording telephone calls....

There is a bunch of different apps that work on Android mobile phones which can be used to record calls on Skype, WhatsApp and phone (receiving from mobile or landline) -- see  https://www.androidauthority.com/best-call-recorder-apps-android-1001838/

For landline-to-landline you'd need a microphone and recorder on the receiving end. The quality is likely to be fairly low and would need to be tested to see if any of these methods gives acceptable results for the creation of language learning materials. It would be worth doing various tests before investing too much time and energy into it.

I hope this helps. Best wishes,
Peter


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On Sat, 2 May 2020 at 21:07, Heather souter <hsouter at gmail.com<mailto:hsouter at gmail.com>> wrote:
Recording apps for recording telephone calls....

Taanshi, hello,

It isn’t for linguistic research but could help Indigenous/endangered/heritage language revitalization workers/learners to continue some form of personal language documentation and learning with Elderly and other fluent speakers while we are in this crisis.  The issue is not being able to physically get together with elderly speakers to work and record them without putting them at risk.

So....  What apps allow for the EASY recording of calls (landline, cell, VOIP) on phones and computers in formats that can be saved and allow for easy repurposing of the recordings as permitted. What would be needed is variety of apps that allow for the recording of phone calls to landlines from landlines, cell phones, computers using VOIP....  And, the app(s) would have to work on a variety of platforms. (BTW, landline phones are often the only communication tech  Elders have out this way.)

Any ideas?

I got to thinking about this for the apprentices in our “Master-Apprentice Program” (a one-on-one community-based “immersion” for adults).  Things are at a standstill and I need to find a way to get our teams going again. So....  How to empower our “apprentices” (and potentially other interested Indigenous ancestral/heritage/endangered language learners) to continue learning and use what proficiency they do have to effectively share language when and where they can. The  resource planning and  creation process can be used  to first accelerate the apprentices own learning.  Then, the learning materials/lesson plans they create will also provide them with the safety and security they need to share/teach in different environments.

Apprentices may not yet feel comfortable meeting their elderly “Master” speakers, but they could work with them over the phone (lowest common denominator tech-wise).  The MAP contact time could  include the planning process and the phone calls/video chats (eventually meetings) to go over the materials with their Masters, right?! They, then, can use the materials as an “immersion set” for their own learning and share them with their families and communities.

Just thinking out loud here!

Kihchi-marsii, thanks, for reading this!

Eekoshi pitamaa. That’s it for now.

Heather

Heather Souter, MEd
Prairies to Woodlands Indigenous Language Revitalization Circle
Manitoba, Canada


--
Prof Peter K. Austin
Humboldt Researcher, Frankfurt University (Nov 2019, Jan-March 2020)
Emeritus Professor in Field Linguistics, SOAS
Visiting Researcher, Oxford University
Foundation Editor, EL Publishing
Honorary Treasurer, Philological Society

Department of Linguistics, SOAS
Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square
London WC1H 0XG
United Kingdom
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