Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Why Educational Videos Often Fail (And How to Make Them Better

 


Why Educational Videos Often Fail (And How to Make Them Better)

“Students rarely stop watching because a subject is difficult. They stop watching because the explanation is unclear.”

That may sound slightly harsh… but after producing educational videos for years, I’m convinced it’s true.

Students will happily wrestle with:

  • difficult maths
  • abstract physics
  • complicated chemistry
  • dense biology concepts

If they feel they are making progress.

What they won’t tolerate for long is confusion caused by poor teaching design.

And that’s an important distinction.

A difficult topic is not the problem.

A badly presented topic is.


The Explosion of Educational Video

We live in a remarkable age.

A student struggling with:

  • differentiation
  • moles
  • electric fields
  • attachment theory

Can pull out a phone and instantly access hundreds of videos.

That’s extraordinary.

But here’s the awkward truth.

A lot of those videos are not very good.

Some are excellent.

Some are… painfully difficult to sit through.

And it usually has nothing to do with the subject knowledge of the presenter.

It’s the delivery.


The Most Common Reasons Educational Videos Fail

1. They Take Too Long to Get to the Point

We’ve all seen them.

You click on a video called:

“Understanding Buffers in 10 Minutes”

And after four minutes you’ve learned:

  • the presenter’s life story
  • what coffee they’re drinking
  • that they nearly didn’t make the video

But not buffers.

Students come with a problem to solve.

They need momentum.

A short introduction is fine.

A rambling preamble is fatal.


2. The Audio Is Terrible

Oddly enough, viewers will tolerate mediocre video.

They will not tolerate dreadful sound.

Problems include:

  • echo
  • hiss
  • clipping
  • low volume
  • background noise
  • inconsistent levels

If students are straining to hear…

They stop concentrating on the content.

And once concentration breaks, learning collapses.

Good audio is not optional.

It’s essential.


3. The Writing Is Tiny

This one drives me mad.

A beautifully explained solution… written in handwriting visible only from the International Space Station.

If a student is watching on:

  • a phone
  • a tablet
  • a laptop

Then small writing is effectively invisible.

The result?

Frustration.

If they cannot read the explanation, the explanation might as well not exist.


4. No Clear Structure

A surprising number of educational videos feel improvised.

The presenter starts somewhere… wanders… remembers another point… circles back… then stops.

The student is left wondering:
“What exactly was I meant to learn?”

A good teaching video needs structure:

  • what are we doing?
  • why does it matter?
  • what do you need to know?
  • worked example
  • summary

Without structure, information becomes noise.


5. Too Much Talking, Not Enough Showing

This is particularly common in science.

The presenter talks about an experiment.

Instead of showing it.

Or describes:

  • motion
  • waves
  • refraction
  • electrolysis

Without visual evidence.

But science is visual.

Students need to see what’s happening.

Talking alone is often not enough.


How I Approach Educational Video Differently

Over time, I’ve built my own approach around one simple principle:

If a student can clearly see and hear the explanation, understanding improves dramatically.

That sounds obvious.

But surprisingly few videos are designed around that idea.


Multi-Camera Teaching Changes Everything

Instead of one static shot, I often use multiple camera angles.

That allows:

  • close-ups of experiments
  • overhead views of written work
  • face-to-camera explanation
  • data displays
  • apparatus detail

Students don’t have to imagine what is happening.

They can see it.

Clearly.

That transforms understanding.


Real Experiments Beat Talking About Experiments

This matters particularly in science teaching.

There’s a huge difference between:

“Let me describe electrolysis…”

and

“Let me show you electrolysis happening now.”

When students see:

  • bubbles forming
  • colour changes
  • sensors responding
  • graphs building live

The concept becomes real.

Not theoretical.

That’s why having both a studio and a working lab matters.


Clear Audio Is a Teaching Tool

I use proper microphones for a reason.

Not because it sounds fancy.

Because clear sound reduces effort.

Students should be concentrating on:
the explanation

Not decoding muffled speech.

Even simple improvements make a huge difference:

  • close microphones
  • noise reduction
  • level balancing
  • removing echo

Good sound makes teaching feel effortless.

Bad sound makes learning exhausting.


Step-by-Step Pacing Matters

One of the biggest mistakes in educational videos is assuming students think as fast as the presenter.

They don’t.

Good teaching pacing means:

  • one idea at a time
  • pause between steps
  • explain why, not just what
  • recap key points

This is especially important in:

  • maths
  • physics calculations
  • chemistry problem solving

Students need time to process.

Fast is not efficient if nobody understands.


Visual Clarity Beats Fancy Graphics

Expensive animations are nice.

But they are not essential.

What matters more:

  • readable writing
  • uncluttered screens
  • sensible zooming
  • visual emphasis

A simple clear diagram beats a flashy confusing one every time.


Why Students Stop Watching

It is rarely because the topic is inherently hard.

Usually it is because:

  • they feel lost
  • they cannot follow
  • they miss a key step
  • the explanation becomes effortful

That’s a design problem.

Not an intelligence problem.


The Real Goal

Educational video should not simply:
deliver information

It should:
build understanding

That means asking:

  • what can the student see?
  • what can they hear?
  • what might confuse them?
  • where might they stop watching?

If you solve those problems…

Retention improves.

Engagement improves.

Learning improves.


The Bigger Lesson

Interestingly, this applies far beyond education.

Whether you’re making:

  • teaching videos
  • sailing films
  • tutorials
  • social media clips

The principles are the same:

Clarity beats complexity.

Communication beats cleverness.

And viewers stay when they understand.


Final Thought

Students rarely stop watching because a subject is difficult.

They stop watching because the explanation is unclear.

And that’s actually encouraging.

Because clarity can be designed.

Monday, 11 May 2026

Building Better Teaching Aids – Why I Keep Redesigning Everything

 


Building Better Teaching Aids – Why I Keep Redesigning Everything

“Good teaching aids don’t just demonstrate science—they make students think.”

That simple idea sits behind an awful lot of what I do.

Over the years, I’ve accumulated a workshop full of:

  • Sensors
  • Cameras
  • Electronics
  • PASCO equipment
  • 3D printers
  • Laser cutters
  • DIY experimental rigs

And yet, despite all the excellent commercial science equipment available today… I still keep redesigning things.

Not because the original equipment is bad.

But because teaching has changed.

Especially online.


The Traditional Problem with Teaching Equipment

Many pieces of science apparatus were designed decades ago with one assumption:
The student is standing right next to it.

That worked reasonably well in a classroom where:

  • Students crowded around a bench
  • The teacher pointed at something small
  • Everyone pretended they could see it properly

The reality?

Usually:

  • The students at the front saw everything
  • The students at the back saw almost nothing

And online learning magnifies that problem dramatically.

A tiny moving needle on a meter? Invisible.
A subtle colour change? Hard to spot.
A delicate oscillation experiment? Lost completely on camera.

So the question becomes:
How do you redesign science demonstrations for the modern world?


Why Commercial Equipment Isn’t Always Enough


Commercial science equipment is often:

  • Extremely accurate
  • Well engineered
  • Robust

But it is not always:

  • Easy to film
  • Easy to visualise
  • Designed for remote learning

Many systems were never intended to be:

  • Seen through a camera lens
  • Viewed on a phone screen
  • Streamed live online

That changes the design priorities completely.


The Rise of the “Visual Experiment”

When teaching online, visibility becomes critical.

Students must be able to:

  • Clearly see what is changing
  • Understand where to look
  • Follow the experiment step-by-step

This means experiments need to become:
Larger
Clearer
More visually obvious

Sometimes that involves:

  • Bigger displays
  • Better lighting
  • Coloured indicators
  • Digital overlays

And sometimes it means redesigning the experiment entirely.


Using PASCO Equipment as the Starting Point

Systems from PASCO Scientific have become incredibly useful because they bridge the gap between:

  • Practical experimentation
  • Real-time data collection
  • Visualisation

Instead of:
“Trust me, the graph should look like this…”

Students can see:

  • Live graphs forming
  • Sensor readings changing instantly
  • Direct relationships between variables

That transforms understanding.

Especially in:

  • Motion experiments
  • Electricity
  • Waves
  • Gas laws
  • Reaction rates

The experiment becomes interactive rather than observational.


But Even Then… I Still Modify Things

Because once you start filming experiments regularly, you notice problems.

For example:

  • A sensor blocks the camera angle
  • Reflections make readings difficult to see
  • Important movements are too small on screen
  • Equipment occupies the wrong space for multi-camera filming

So gradually:
rigs evolve.


DIY Builds – Solving the Problems Commercial Equipment Doesn’t



This is where the workshop becomes important.

Sometimes the solution is surprisingly simple:

  • A different mounting bracket
  • A larger scale model
  • A redesigned support
  • Better positioning for cameras

Other times it becomes a full DIY project.

For example:

  • Building a low-cost linear air track
  • Creating custom mounts for sensors
  • Designing rigs specifically for filming experiments

The goal is not simply:
“Can the experiment work?”

But:

 “Can students understand it instantly?”


Multi-Camera Teaching Changes Everything

One of the biggest changes in modern teaching is the ability to combine:

  • Close-up views
  • Wide shots
  • Data screens
  • Live annotation

All simultaneously.

Instead of students trying to look:

  • At the teacher
  • At the experiment
  • At the graph

They can see all three at once.

That massively reduces cognitive overload.

It also allows:

  • Slow demonstrations
  • Instant replay
  • Highlighting of critical moments

A tiny detail suddenly becomes obvious.


Why Interactivity Matters

Students learn best when they:

  • Predict outcomes
  • Make decisions
  • Observe results

Good teaching aids encourage this.

Bad teaching aids encourage passive watching.

That’s a huge difference.

So I increasingly design experiments where students can say:
“What happens if we change this?”

And then we actually test it live.

This transforms science from:
memorisation

into:
investigation.


Improving Measurement Accuracy

Interestingly, redesigning experiments often improves accuracy too.

Because when you:

  • Stabilise equipment better
  • Reduce friction
  • Improve alignment
  • Use digital sensing

You reduce noise and uncertainty.

Students then see:

  • Cleaner results
  • Clearer trends
  • Better relationships between variables

Which makes interpretation easier.


Teaching Aids Should Support Thinking

This is the key point.

A teaching aid is not there to:
look impressive.

It is there to:
make the student think clearly.

The best demonstrations:

  • simplify complexity
  • focus attention
  • reveal patterns

And that often means:
redesigning the original setup

The Unexpected Benefit – Students See Engineering Too

One thing I particularly enjoy is that students begin to see:

  • problem solving
  • prototyping
  • iterative design

Not just science content.

They realise:
science equipment is designed by people
experiments can be improved
engineering and teaching overlap constantly

That’s a valuable lesson in itself.


And This Is Why I Keep Redesigning Everything

Not because I dislike commercial equipment.

But because:

  • teaching changes
  • technology changes
  • online learning changes expectations

And good teaching evolves alongside it.

Every redesign asks the same question:
“How can I make this clearer?”

Because when students can:

  • see clearly
  • interact directly
  • understand visually

Science stops feeling abstract.

And starts making sense.

Sunday, 10 May 2026

Can You Live Stream a Sailing Race? The Technical Challenges

 




Can You Live Stream a Sailing Race? The Technical Challenges

“Broadcasting from a moving boat sounds easy… until you actually try it.”

From the shore, live streaming a sailing race looks straightforward.

Put a camera on a boat.
Connect it to the internet.
Press “Go Live.”

Simple.

Except it really isn’t.

The moment you try to broadcast from a moving boat on open water, an entire list of technical problems appears almost immediately:

  • Cameras getting soaked
  • Audio ruined by wind
  • Mobile signals vanishing
  • Batteries running flat
  • Overheating electronics
  • Salt spray on lenses
  • Boats bouncing violently
  • Camera operators trying not to fall overboard

And somehow, while dealing with all that, you are still supposed to produce a watchable programme.

Over the past few years, we have been experimenting with filming sailing from dinghies, safety boats, and powerboats on the River Thames, using everything from waterproof action cameras to 360 cameras, mirrorless cinema cameras, and multicamera live production systems.

The reality is that live streaming sailing is not just photography.

It becomes a mixture of:

  • television production
  • marine engineering
  • networking
  • power management
  • weather forecasting
  • problem solving
  • and occasionally controlled panic.

The Biggest Problem: Connectivity

The first major issue is internet connection.

When filming at home in the studio, the connection is stable:

  • fibre internet
  • wired networks
  • controlled environment
  • mains electricity

On a boat, none of those luxuries exist.

Instead, you rely heavily on mobile networks.

And mobile networks over water can be surprisingly unreliable.

Why Water Causes Problems

Water reflects radio signals.

As the boat moves:

  • signal strength changes constantly
  • the antenna orientation changes
  • nearby banks and trees block signals
  • bridges interrupt coverage
  • crowded events overload local mobile cells

You may have perfect 5G coverage one minute…

…and absolutely nothing the next.

A sailing race also moves over a large area, so your connection quality changes continuously throughout the broadcast.

The result?

Frozen video.
Dropped frames.
Audio glitches.
Complete stream failures.


The Solution? Redundancy

Professional broadcasters solve this using bonded cellular systems.

These combine multiple mobile connections together:

  • EE
  • Vodafone
  • O2
  • Starlink
  • marina Wi-Fi
  • shore relays

If one network drops, another keeps working.

For smaller productions, things become more creative.

Possible solutions include:

  • multiple mobile phones acting as hotspots
  • routers with dual SIM cards
  • recording locally while streaming lower-quality previews
  • shore-based relay stations
  • safety boats acting as floating repeaters

It quickly becomes an engineering exercise.


Waterproofing Everything

The next challenge is obvious.

Water.

And not just rain.

Sailing creates spray everywhere.

A calm day can suddenly become chaotic when:

  • another boat passes
  • the wind increases
  • the helm turns sharply
  • the safety boat accelerates

Electronics and water rarely cooperate well.

The Real Enemy Is Salt

Salt water is especially destructive.

Even tiny amounts of spray can:

  • corrode connectors
  • damage microphones
  • fog lenses
  • short equipment
  • destroy exposed metal parts

That means every component needs protection:

  • waterproof cases
  • sealed connectors
  • silica gel packs
  • rain covers
  • dry bags
  • anti-fog treatments

And even then, problems still happen.

One unexpected wave can end the entire broadcast.

For my broadcast we are on a river so salt isn't a problem.


Power: The Problem Nobody Notices

People think cameras are the difficult part.

Actually, power management is often harder.

A live production setup may include:

  • cameras
  • wireless transmitters
  • microphones
  • routers
  • monitors
  • switchers
  • recording systems
  • intercoms
  • lighting
  • charging systems

Every item needs electricity.

On shore, you simply plug things in.

On a boat, every watt matters.

Batteries Disappear Faster Than Expected

Cold weather reduces battery performance.

Bright screens consume huge power.

Wireless video systems drain batteries rapidly.

Continuous streaming is especially demanding because:

  • encoding video uses processing power
  • mobile transmission increases load
  • external monitors stay on continuously

A setup that lasts three hours indoors may survive barely one hour afloat.

This is why power planning becomes critical.


Camera Placement Is Far Harder Than It Looks

One of the biggest lessons we have learned is that simply having cameras is not enough.

Where you place them matters enormously.

A poor camera position can make exciting sailing look completely dull.

Problems With Boat Cameras

Boats constantly move.

This means cameras suffer from:

  • vibration
  • sudden shocks
  • rolling horizons
  • changing light
  • spray on lenses
  • blocked views from sails or crew

Even mounting a camera securely becomes difficult.

Too high:

  • unstable footage

Too low:

  • constant spray

Too far back:

  • no sense of speed

Too close:

  • impossible framing

This is why 360 cameras have become incredibly useful for sailing.

You can mount them almost anywhere and decide later where to “point” the camera during editing.

That flexibility is incredibly valuable when conditions change every second.


Audio Is Even Worse

Most viewers will tolerate imperfect video.

They will not tolerate bad sound.

And sailing is extremely hostile to microphones.

The main enemy?

Wind noise.

Even gentle wind becomes destructive once a boat starts moving.

Without protection, microphones produce nothing but roaring distortion.

The Battle Against Wind

Solutions include:

  • dead cats and furry windshields
  • internal audio recording
  • waterproof lavalier microphones
  • sheltered microphone placement
  • directional microphones
  • post-production noise reduction

But every solution introduces compromises.

Cover a microphone too much and speech sounds muffled.

Expose it too much and the wind destroys it.

And communication becomes even harder when the crew are spread across a moving boat.


Multi-Camera Switching on the Water

This is where things become truly complicated.

A proper live broadcast may involve:

  • onboard cameras
  • shore cameras
  • drone shots
  • commentary feeds
  • safety boat cameras
  • mark rounding cameras
  • finish line cameras

Synchronising all of this is difficult enough on land.

On water, it becomes a technical puzzle.

Latency Problems

Different cameras may arrive with different delays.

For example:

  • one camera transmitted via Wi-Fi
  • another via cellular
  • another recorded locally
  • another through HDMI wireless links

All arrive slightly out of sync.

The director may switch cameras only to discover:

  • delayed audio
  • mismatched commentary
  • frozen pictures
  • buffering streams

Professional sailing coverage uses large production teams for a reason.


The Engineering Side Is What Makes It Interesting

What makes sailing broadcasts fascinating is that they combine so many disciplines together.

You are simultaneously dealing with:

  • storytelling
  • cinematography
  • networking
  • electronics
  • power systems
  • waterproofing
  • weather
  • physics
  • radio communication
  • boat handling

It becomes a floating engineering project.

And every event teaches something new.


The Future of Sailing Coverage

The technology is improving rapidly.

Smaller waterproof cameras.
Better mobile networks.
Lighter batteries.
5G bonding.
Starlink marine systems.
AI tracking cameras.
360 live streaming.

All of these are making sailing broadcasts more achievable for smaller creators.

But the challenges remain very real.

The audience may only see the final polished footage.

What they do not see is the frantic effort behind the scenes:

  • wiping spray from lenses
  • rebooting routers
  • changing batteries
  • securing loose cables
  • rescuing overheating equipment
  • trying not to drop expensive cameras into the river

Or occasionally discovering that the best shot of the day was blocked by somebody’s waterproof hood.


Final Thoughts

Live streaming sailing races is possible.

But it is far from simple.

Every successful broadcast is really a collection of tiny engineering victories held together by preparation, improvisation, and a certain amount of luck.

And perhaps that is part of the appeal.

Because when everything finally works…

…and the audience can experience the movement of the boats, the sound of the water, the tension at the start line, and the atmosphere of the race live…

…it feels genuinely magical.

Saturday, 9 May 2026

Filming the Competent Crew Course – What Worked… and What Didn’t


Filming the Competent Crew Course – What Worked… and What Didn’t

When we booked the Competent Crew course in Croatia, one thing was certain.

We wanted to film it properly.

Not just the pretty sunsets and harbour shots, but the actual experience of learning to sail a yacht for the first time:

The mistakes.
The confusion.
The rope tangles.
The nervous moments.
The breakthroughs.

The reality.

And after a week aboard a 47-foot yacht, with cameras spread across bags, pockets, cabins, and occasionally hanging around our necks while trying not to fall overboard, we learnt a huge amount about filming on a sailing course.

Some things worked brilliantly.

Other things absolutely didn’t.


What Worked Well

Small Cameras Beat Big Cameras

This was probably the biggest lesson of the entire trip.

The large “professional-looking” cameras stayed in bags far more often than expected.

Why?

Because sailing lessons move quickly.

One moment you are discussing springs and breast ropes.
The next you are suddenly casting off lines while trying not to stand on the genoa sheets.

There simply isn’t time to unpack a large camera, fit a microphone, balance exposure, and start recording.

The cameras that got used the most were:

  • The 360 cameras
  • The Olympus Tough cameras
  • Small handheld cameras
  • Phones

The best camera on a sailing course is often the one already switched on and within reach.


The 360 Camera Was the Star

The 360 camera turned out to be the hero of the trip.

Mounted in the cockpit, it quietly captured:

  • Sail hoists
  • Tacking
  • Steering
  • Crew movement
  • Harbour manoeuvres
  • Conversations
  • The occasional panic

The beauty of 360 filming is that you do not have to point the camera.

You simply record everything and decide later what matters.

That matters enormously on a yacht where events happen very quickly and often in the “wrong” direction.

Several moments we thought we had missed entirely were rescued later in editing because the 360 camera had silently captured them.

For sailing content, that flexibility is incredibly powerful.


Audio Was Harder Than Expected

Wind noise is relentless.

Even when conditions feel fairly calm, microphones hear far more wind than human ears notice.

Some clips were unusable because:

  • Wind hit the microphone directly
  • Clothing rubbed against microphones
  • Ropes banged against the deck
  • Engines drowned conversations
  • People spoke while facing away

Inside the cabin created a different problem.

The cabins were dark, cramped, and echoey.

Filming lessons below deck was difficult because:

  • There wasn’t enough light
  • People blocked each other
  • Cameras fogged slightly after moving from outside heat
  • Background noise from engines and pumps constantly appeared
  • We weren't down in the cabin very often

Next time we would:

  • Use more small wireless microphones
  • Carry additional wind protection
  • Add compact LED lighting below deck
  • Record more separate narration afterwards

We Missed More “Learning” Than Expected

Interestingly, we filmed plenty of sailing…

…but not enough learning.

We captured:

  • Steering
  • Sailing
  • Harbour arrivals
  • Rope handling
  • Views
  • Sunsets

But we missed many of the genuinely important teaching moments:

  • Some of the Briefings
  • Mistakes
  • Corrections
  • Discussions
  • Planning manoeuvres
  • Crew problem-solving

Why?

Because when you are learning, your brain is busy simply trying to keep up.

You forget to film. Often because we were doing the job.


And honestly, sometimes filming would have got in the way of actually learning safely.

That balance is important.


Some Moments Were Impossible to Film

There are moments during sailing where filming simply stops being the priority.

For example:

  • Entering busy marinas
  • Strong crosswinds
  • Tight manoeuvres
  • Sail changes
  • Getting a camera on deck when it is in a cabin and you are busy.

At those points, safety and concentration matter far more than content creation.

There were several times when the cameras simply stayed off because everybody needed both hands free.

And that was the correct decision.


What We Wish We Had Filmed

Looking back, there are several things we now wish we had captured more carefully.

More Mistakes

Oddly enough, mistakes often make the best educational content.

People learn far more from:

  • Wrong rope handling
  • Poor sail trim
  • Confused manoeuvres
  • Failed docking attempts

…than from polished “perfect” sailing.

Real learning looks messy.


More Daily Reflections

By the end of each day we were tired.

Really tired.

But we now wish we had filmed short diary segments every evening discussing:

  • What we learnt
  • What went wrong
  • What surprised us
  • What we found difficult

Those reflections would have added enormous value later.

Memory fades surprisingly quickly after a long sailing day.


More Life Aboard the Yacht

Living aboard is a huge part of Competent Crew.

Things we should have filmed more:

  • how to use the head
  • Storage
  • Sleeping arrangements
  • Charging batteries
  • Drying clothes
  • Shower routines
  • Packing
  • Cabin organisation

These are exactly the things beginners worry about before taking a course.


What We’ll Do Differently Next Time

The next sailing series will be filmed differently.

Especially with the upcoming Thames A-Rater project and future yacht sailing content.

Better Planning

Not rigid scripting.

But having a checklist:

  • Morning briefing
  • Manoeuvre explanation
  • End-of-day reflection
  • Equipment shots
  • Harbour arrival
  • Mistakes and lessons

More Fixed Cameras

Fixed cameras reduce workload enormously.

Instead of chasing footage:

  • Mount cameras
  • Start recording
  • Forget about them
  • Having different and better Camera mounts.

That allows you to concentrate on sailing.


More Audio Recording

Sometimes audio alone tells the story beautifully.

Commands shouted during manoeuvres.
The noise of winches.
Water against the hull.
The silence after engines stop.

Good sailing audio is incredibly atmospheric.


The Biggest Lesson

The biggest surprise?

Filming sailing is far harder than sailing itself.

Because you are trying to:

  • Learn
  • Stay safe
  • Avoid getting in the way
  • Protect expensive equipment
  • Capture meaningful footage
  • Remember batteries
  • Avoid seasickness
  • Stay dry

…all at the same time.

But despite all the problems, we came home with something valuable.

Real footage.

Real learning.

Real mistakes.

And that is often far more interesting than polished perfection.