When YouTube is blocked (way more than eight ways around)

In so many ways, YouTube is the world's video portal. It is also, perhaps, the fastest growing website. Sure, lots of it is seedy and inappropriate.  But so much of its content is legitimately important for education, for media and information fluency.  For example, I blogged recently about the learning potential of the YouTube Symphony Orchestra, an international collaboration. YouTube's YouChoose became one of the richest presidential campaign resources. Our President-elect now chooses to upload his transition team messages to our nation on this portal. The fact is, YouTube is blocked in many of our schools.  And many of us are suffering this loss. The fact is, every single day many of us spend a good deal of time trying to figure out how to get the videos we need to use in our classrooms and libraries. The fact is, students who really do need to use YouTube videos in their presentations, face great frustration. Pretty much everyday, in schools everywhere, and at homes at night, students and teachers are trying to figure out how to best capture video that is blocked to them during the school day.
I myself am a long-time sufferer of YouTube-block (despite my understanding of my District's motivations) and I have developed a variety of strategies for treating the condition. I have seven suggestions:
1. Check out a wide variety of alternate video portals.  You may find that the same videos (or decent alternates) have been uploaded to sites less likely to be blocked, for instance TeacherTube, SchoolTube I've been trying to collect a bunch of other portals in our Video Pathfinder.  Pease help build this wiki! 2. TechCrunch recently shared a YouTube download tool.  Enter the YouTube URL for the video in the search box and the video will be downloaded and converted to flv format.  Download and use VLC, a cross-platform media player to view it. This works like a dream for me!
3. Zamzar is one of my go-to tools for any type of file conversion, and it also allows you to download media. Enter the URL of the YouTube video you need and your email address.  Zamzar will convert the video to the format you selected and send you an email with a link that allows you to download the converted file.  The video file can now live on your desktop or flash drive. 4. KickYouTube is kind of amazing. It works like this:
Load the URL for the YouTube video in your browser (I chose My Hope, one of my favorite videos, an original song by sweetafton23 about digital footprints):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=avxpn_MsPYs
Insert the word "kick" between the www. and the youtube.com section of the URL:
http://www.kickyoutube.com/watch?v=avxpn_MsPYs
The page will reload with the KickYouTube toolbar. You will be prompted to choose a video format--FLV, MPG, MP3, HD MP4, AVI, iPhone, etc.  MOV does not seem to be an option.
Note--The KickYouTube site offers a video demonstration in English and Spanish on how to use the service. You actually need to begin in the address line in YouTube to initiate the kicking process. 5. The Googlesystem blog offers instructions for downloading YouTube videos as MP4 files. (In fact they link to a Google search with a variety of result options listing other possible strategies.) 6. Kiersten, one of my very favorite students, discovered a strategy for including YouTube (and other Flash) videos in PowerPoint presentations and along the way introduced me to Wikihow. (That site is worthy of its own post for sure!).  Anyway, the seniors are having great success adding videos directly into their PowerPoints. It's gone kinda viral as an alternate to linking or to downloading and converting videos to WMVs using Zamzar. 7. And finally, similar to KickYouTube, Wikihow also suggests How to Download YouTube Videos Using Voobys.  There's also a YouTube explanation. This one I've yet to try. 8.  Fast Video Download is a Firefox add-on that works well with its accompanying FLV player tool (for PCs).  It works for me, on my MacBook, in combination with old favorite Zamzar for converting those FLV files to MOVs. (Sorry to those folks who read this post a while ago. I can't count!) From our commenters: Alec: 9.  Miro 10. Freedom Sticks Jeff: 11. vixy.net (another FLV converter and will bring the YouTube vid straight to your desktop or USB drive) Later discoveries:

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