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The Analysis Of the Braver Podcast
Honors Project
In fulfillment of the Requirements for
The Esther G. Maynor Honors College
University of North Carolina at Pembroke
By
Andrew Reece
Middle-Grade Math Education
December 8, 2014
NarneHonorsColleg
NameFaculty Mentor
MarlMilewczDean, Esther
(/
Date
Date
DateHonors College

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Preface
The Braver Podcast has been a work-in-progress for a year and a half. It started from an
idea and grew into an unexpected success. This final project will discuss the history of a podcast
that became a school-wide achievement, and show data that proves there is a demand for the
podcast. Braver is my legacy at UNCP and I am grateful I was its creator.

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Table of Contents Abstract…………………………………………………………………………………………6
Introduction…………………………………………………………………………………….7
The Origins of Braver…………………………………………………………………………..7
Braver: Volunteers and Planning For 2014……………………………………………………9
Assessment Report..............................................................................................................…....9
Self-Reflection………………………………………………………………………………..18
Conclusion……………………………………………………………………………………18
References……………………………………………………………………………………20

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List of Figures Figure 1 Interest Survey
Figure 2 Question 1
(Create).
Figure 3 Question 2
(Create).

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Figure 4 Question 3
(Create).
Figure 5 Question 4
(Create).
Figure 6 Question 5
(Create).

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Figure 7 Downloads
(Libsyn).
Figure 8 Countries
(Libsyn).
Figure 9 Technology
(Libsyn).

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The Analysis of the Braver Podcast
by
Andrew Reece
Bachelor’s Degree
The University of North Carolina at Pembroke
December 9, 2014
Abstract
In this final project will discuss: 1. The origins of Braver, 2. An assessment report of the podcast,
3. A self-reflection on my position as Editor-in Chief, and conclude 4.On the future of the Braver
Podcast. This final project will also discuss the history of a podcast that became a school-wide
achievement. The origins of Braver will focus on the spark of the idea during a conversation with
Gordon Byrd in the fall of 2013, to creating a podcast through the Literacy Commons, to creating
the first episode in the spring of 2014. An assessment report was done for this project to answer
the main research questions in my senior project proposal: “What are the overarching
educational effects of the podcast?” and “Did the podcast create educational relations between
the campus and community?” The assessment report will focus on the data gathered from a
survey taken in the University Center this November, the number of downloads throughout 2014,
the countries that the podcast was downloaded in, and how the podcast was downloaded using
technology. The results of the assessment report show that there is a demand for Braver, and
could be a cornerstone of the university. The self-reflection will focus on the personal
characteristics I gained working on Braver, how Braver has helped me prepare for my future
career in teaching, and advice I would give to future volunteers of the Braver podcast. I will
conclude by what I hope the future of Braver will be, and have Braver’s mission statement as a
beacon for future volunteers.

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Introduction
The Braver Podcast has been a work-in-progress for a year and a half. It started from an
idea and grew into an unexpected success. In this final project will discuss: 1. The origins of
Braver, 2. An assessment report of the podcast, 3. A self-reflection on my position as Editor-in
Chief, and conclude 4.On the future of the Braver Podcast. This final project will also discuss the
history of a podcast that became a school-wide achievement.
The origins of Braver will focus on the spark of the idea during a conversation with
Gordon Byrd in the fall of 2013, to creating a podcast through the Literacy Commons, to creating
the first episode in the spring of 2014. An assessment report was done for this project to answer
the main research questions in my senior project proposal: “What are the overarching
educational effects of the podcast?” and “Did the podcast create educational relations between
the campus and community?” The assessment report will focus on the data gathered from a
survey taken in the University Center this November, the number of downloads throughout 2014,
the countries that the podcast was downloaded in, and how the podcast was downloaded using
technology. The results of the assessment report show that there is a demand for Braver, and
could be a cornerstone of the university. The self-reflection will focus on the personal
characteristics I gained working on Braver, how Braver has helped me prepare for my future
career in teaching, and advice I would give to future volunteers of the Braver podcast. I will
conclude by what I hope the future of Braver will be, and have Braver’s mission statement as a
beacon for future volunteers.
The Origins of Braver
In the beginning, I didn’t even consider my idea would become my senior project.
Gordon Byrd, the secretary of the Honors College, asked me if I wanted to help create a school
Herald, featuring news, writing, and opinionated reviews. I was interested to do that, because I
read the newspapers the school provides (USA Today, The Robisonian, The Pine Needle, etc.),
and the occasional Rolling Stone. I wanted to create something that would enrich that same
fascination I get when reading news for the
community and campus. Interviewing and
investigating are methods that I am passionate
about. UNC Pembroke is a university, but student
clubs and organizations rarely provide
information about the campus, community, or
even global topics. Gordon Byrd told me to go
see Dr. David Marquard, Head of the Literacy
Commons, and a UNCP English Professor, to
discuss my idea further. I had many
conversations with Dr. Marquard on how to
create UNCP’s version of Rolling Stone, and
there was progress after every conversation. After
spreading the word to my friends Jordon McGirt and Raymond Hunt about my idea I had them
interested in volunteering and helping me start on making this idea a reality. Dr. Marquard
suggested I take a survey seen in Figure 1 at Pembroke Day to see if the community was
interested in receiving news from the community, campus, and the world. I held my own
Figure 1

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informal survey during Pembroke Day, 2013 asking students how interested (1 not interested- 5
highly interested), they would be to have information about the community and pop culture
online. 54 people were surveyed and over half were highly interested in having digital
information community and pop culture topics.
How the Podcast Episodes Are Created
A Herald would be too much money to print each month for the campus and community,
so we decided to do a video podcast. However, that took too much time to create and edit. Dr.
Marquard suggested we use a regular podcast feed on iTunes. It costs $20 each month to keep
the episodes on iTunes. People can even directly access the podcast by using their iPhone’s
Podcast application and search “Literacy Commons Braver.” Each episode is done on the
GarageBand (a recording program installed in every Mac). I have to hook up a microphone to
my laptop, and choose an empty layout. I press record, and I can edit out sections by overlapping
or trimming the recording. I would record on sight including my office, places of business, or an
organization’s office. I also use loops for background music by adding another recording section
and placing the loop in it. I set the volumes to where it is mastered, and then I convert it to an
MP3 or an MP4. I then send it to Dr. Marquard where he posts it on iTunes. Episodes were easier
to make after I was comfortable using GarageBand.
Senior Proposal
In the spring of 2014 I wanted Braver to become my senior project. I began working on
my proposal for my senior project. With the help of Dr. Marquard, we created a timeline and
outlined on how the project would unfold in the fall of 2014. The timeline is seen below:
August-September:
• Coordinating interviews and reviews
• Creating growth and support through professional public relations
with the community and university
• Write IRB proposal
• Finding sponsors to support the podcast (which are needed for growth and
sustainability for the podcast)
October-November:
• Coordinating interviews and reviews
• Beginning to collect initial statistical data regarding downloads of
podcast episodes
• Writing a survey on the effectiveness of the podcast
November-December:
• Coordinating interviews and reviews
• Analyzing statistical data
• Conducting a survey, and analyzing the responses
• Writing an assessment report from all data collected
• Writing a self-assessment on how Braver affected me
• Having an archive of podcast episodes

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Braver: Volunteers and Planning For 2014
As I have stated before, I had many people interested in helping create what Braver is
today. Dr. Marquard created our first Braver episode as an introduction to what Braver is. I then
created episodes introducing the volunteers and their role in Braver including Megan Cook and
Raymond Hunt. Jordan McGirt created the symbol that I use on Braver’s Facebook page. I had
Megan Cook and Raymond Hunt featured monthly on the podcast that would do movie reviews
and interview me on such things. I had Megan Cook running Braver’s Twitter page. I am the
only one currently working on making the episodes with the help of the Literacy Commons,
because volunteers from last semester wanted to focus on their academics.
What I Planned Would Happen This Semester
I planned that I would have a fully-staffed team. I also planned that I would have a
member who would take my place as Editor-in-Chief. My staff would do research to find new
episodes on their own. It would be a well-oiled machine. I wanted to do an episode where I sat
down the Chancellor of the university and the Lumbee Council and have a professional
discussion on the future of the campus and community.
What Actually Happened This Semester
The people I had worked with focused on their academics instead of their volunteer
position in Braver, or only participated from a distance. I was the only one doing episodes. I ran
out of time to do the Chancellor/Lumbee Council episode due to the work load in other classes.
No one came by my office hours or wanted to join Braver at all of the Literacy Commons
interest meetings. The only thing that was difficult to accomplish in my proposal was creating a
widespread public relation in the campus and community. There seemed to be no public relations
when it came to Braver. Other than the Literacy Commons promoting it online and in Dr.
Marquard’s class, there weren’t’ fliers around campus, weekly e-mails on episodes or any other
method to get the word out. Since many weren’t aware of Braver, they would have not known
my office hours. I spent most of my time in my office working on Braver episodes, or getting
homework done in other classes. However, I am not mad at the circumstances. It taught me to be
self-reliant, and focus on what I could do for Braver. I have no one to take over Braver next
semester.
Assessment Report
My assessment report was on the effectiveness of the podcast by studying trends and
statistics from listeners to the podcast. The next survey I took was expedited through the UNCP’s
Institutional Review Board (IRB). In my proposal, the working research questions for this senior
project were: “What are the overarching educational effects of the podcast?” and “Did the
podcast create educational relations between the campus and community?” The survey was
handed out at the University Center for four days and got 250 responses. With each question I
created a pie chart for clarity and provided an analysis below each graph.

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QUESTION 1: What is your position? Check all that apply.
Student=S
Faculty/Staff=F
Student/Commuter=S/C
Faculty/Staff/Student=F/S
Student/Community Member= S/CM
Faculty/Staff/Student/Commuter=F/S/C
Student/Community Member/Commuter=S/CM/C
Faculty/Staff/Student/Community Member/Commuter=F/S/CM/C
I wanted to ask this question because I wanted to know what position people had if they listened
to my podcast. If it was mainly faculty/staff I did not do my job well to inform the campus
majority which is the students. However, only receiving a majority of student responses my data
became skewed from a student’s perspective. The mission for the podcast is the community as
well. This shows a need to boost public relations outside of campus to get the community
involved. Another survey should be conducted in the community as well.
It seems that many of the people I surveyed were students. I was in the University Center during
lunchtime, so I received very few surveys from people other than students. The data shows 90.4
% of the people who were surveyed were students which is seen in Figure 2.
Figure 2

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QUESTION 2: Are you aware of the Literacy Commons Braver Podcast?
Yes=Y
No=N
I wanted to ask this question because I wanted to see if we needed to increase our public
relations in the campus and community. Many who were surveyed answered a majority of yes; it
seems public relations would not have to grow. However if they answered no, there would be a
need for more public relations in the future.
Many people were not aware of the podcast (88%) which is seen in Figure 3. It seems there is a
need to increase our public awareness to gain listeners and to accomplish Braver’s mission to
build a bridge between the campus and community. Many who were surveyed asked me what a
podcast is and I explained to them gladly by using Braver as an example on my phone.
Figure 3

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Question 3: How frequently do you listen to the episodes?
Daily=D
Weekly=W
Monthly=M
Never=N
I wanted to ask this question for the people who do listen to the podcast to see if they were
frequent listeners. However for the people who were not aware of the podcast could have never
listened to it. With the results from Question 2 I was not surprised to receive the results from
Question 3.
The results of the data show that 94% of the people who were surveyed have never listened to
the podcast seen in Figure 4. This does not mean that no one listens to the podcast, only that the
small sample I took for this survey doesn’t. Since most people were not aware of the podcast
they could have never listened to it. However, the 6% of people that took the survey and do listen
to the podcast said they listen to it on a regular basis.
Figure 4

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QUESTION 4: After listening to the podcast, did it increase your awareness of the
community and campus surroundings?
Greatly Increased=GI
Slightly Increased=SI
Did Not Increase=DN
I wanted to ask this question to answer my research question in my proposal: “Did the podcast
create educational relations between the campus and community?” From the results of Question
2 and 3, the results of Question 4 would also look similar. However, many people did not know
how to answer the question. Many who responded by saying they had never listened to the
podcast answered that it slightly increased their awareness.
The results of the data show that 65% of the people who were surveyed said their educational
awareness did not increase after listening to the podcast seen in Figure 5. Since most people do
not listen to the podcast their educational awareness did not increase. However, the ones who do
listen to the podcast have increased their educational awareness of the campus and community.
This shows that the mission of Braver is being fulfilled through those who listen to the podcast. I
should have made this an optional question for the people who were surveyed who had listened
to the podcast.
Figure 5

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QUESTION 5: After taking this survey, will you listen or continue to listen to the podcast?
Yes=Y
No=N
I wanted to ask this question to see if the survey takers would listen to the podcast after taking
the survey. This was a question focusing on public relations towards the campus and community.
If many people answered no, I would have not been surprised if Braver would end after this
semester.
The results of the data show that 75% said they would listen to the podcast after taking the
survey in Figure 6. It seems that the campus and community want Braver to keep going. Whether
the people who took the survey have listened to Braver before or are now just aware of it, Braver
has a demand. This set of data, however small, shows positive results for the future of Braver.
Figure 6

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Braver Downloads in 2014
Throughout this year, there has been a decent average of downloads each day, seen in
Figure 7. It makes sense that the downloads decreased over the summer years, and peak in the
middle of the year when new and weekly episodes are made. Spring 2014 we were gaining an
average of 30 downloads a day, and as the data below shows there was a great decrease in
listenership in the summer. However there was a strange spike in listens in early July. Fall 2014
we reached our high ratings again in late September but slowly our downloads began decreasing
through the semester. Overall Braver has had 1,947 entire downloads in 2014.
Figure 7

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Countries
It seems that Braver was not only listened to in North Carolina and other parts of the
United States, but in different countries also, which is seen in Figure 8. This means that Braver
had a part in increasing Pembroke’s public relations to a global standard. Many of our listeners
in the different parts of the world may want to go to UNCP as their school of choice from
listening to the podcast. They could also want to create their own podcast for their school
modeling what Braver has done for Pembroke. I am very proud of this astonishing
accomplishment that I did not plan for.
Figure 8

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Technology Used To Download Braver
There are different ways to get to the Podcast. People can go through our website on the
UNCP’s Literacy Commons page. People can go straight towards iTunes and search “Literacy
Commons Braver” in the search bar. People can also go through the Podcast app on their iPhone
and search “Literacy Commons Braver” to listen to Braver’s episodes. Seen in Figure 9 it seems
that the mobile option is the most popular way to listen to Braver.
This also means that there is a gap in literacy to find the podcast through technology.
While taking the survey I had to show how people could listen to their podcast using my phone
and laptop. Dr. Marquard and I discussed on creating a phone application where anyone could
download it for free, and episodes would upload directly to your phone or computer. However,
that cost more money which the literacy Commons does not have at this moment in time.
Overall Analysis
Based on the analysis of the assessment report, it seems there is a demand for the podcast,
and it could grow substantially with the help of public relations, and an efficient staff. The
podcast increased the educational awareness of the campus and community for those who
listened. People who took the survey and are now aware of the podcast plan on listening to it in
the future. Our downloads are increasing day by day. Our listenership has become global, and
Braver has a chance to become more user-friendly in the future by creating an app.
Braver can become a cornerstone at UNCP with the right amount of public relations,
creating a user-friendly app, and having a good amount of volunteers who are dedicated to
making Braver grow. From reviewing the overall data, the potential of Braver has only touched
the surface of what it could be. Overall Braver works.
Figure 9

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Self-Reflection
The Personal Characteristics I Gained Through Braver
The planning of an episode takes research, scheduling, and driving. I had to stay
organized, patient, and flexible when doing an episode. For example, one episode took 2 weeks
when I planned on it being done in 3 days. I drove to the person I wanted to interview,
professionally introduced myself to the interviewee, got their number, and after many
understanding calls I was able to interview the person. However, when I got there to set up my
equipment, I had to wait 30 minutes for the person to return from an errand. I was patient and
flexible during my wait, and I thanked them after the interview anyways. Braver has taught me to
be professional, flexible, patient, and understanding.
How Braver Has Helped Prepare Me For My Career
As a future teacher, I needed to learn how to be a leader. Braver has taught me to plan for
surprises, be self-reliant, patient, organized, professional, and unconditionally courteous. These
characteristics will help me during my teaching career when I interact with students,
parents/guardians, and faculty/staff.
How Braver Has Affected Me
I had no idea that Braver would soar above what I wanted it to be in the beginning. I
came to this school because I saw an opportunity to make a difference. I believe I have made that
difference through Braver. I always enjoyed creating the episodes, and researching for future
episodes. The people I interviewed affected me greatly and made me feel part of the community
or were open with me about their artistic work. Tanaya Winder’s stories about her classroom
where her students cried together with a student in emotional pain almost made me cry during
the interview. There were times when I felt overwhelmed with work for Braver, but it was worth
it in the end. I just wish more people would have been a part of it. It was disappointing sitting in
those interest meetings for the Literacy Commons and no one wanting to volunteer after I spoke
about Braver. I saw many hours pass during my time in my office, without anyone stopping by. I
was passionate about Braver and I still am. I wish I could still keep creating episodes but my
academics must come first. It has been my legacy for my time here at UNCP and I am grateful to
be its creator.
Conclusion
The Future For Braver
Next semester I will step down as Editor-in-Chief of Braver. I do not know if Braver will
continue, but hopefully there will be a replacement to keep Braver going. Data shows that there
is a demand for Braver and it must be met. I would like to see Braver become a 1 credit class
dedicated to the Mass Communications department for students interested in working on a
podcast team. The advice I would give for anyone interested in volunteering for Braver would be
to stay committed and watch how it grows. I hope people use this report to help them create a
much better Braver than I did. The only thing I would change would be to have someone
dedicated to promoting the podcast through e-mails, fliers, social networking, etc. I would like to
thank all of the supporters and people who helped create this podcast. I would personally, like to

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thank Dr. Marquand for being there each step of the way, going above and beyond to help out
and providing a home for Braver in the Literacy Commons. I did what I set out to do, and to
conclude my report I will state the mission statement of Braver.
Mission Statement
The Literacy Commons’ Podcast Braver provides a bridge between UNCP with that of
the broader community of Pembroke, Robeson County—and adjacent counties. We offer
multiple episodes a week ranging from reviews of local restaurants, to discussions with local
town council members, to coverage of local artistic expressions and UNCP related achievements
and advancements. Ultimately, we encourage our listeners to become “braver” by way of being
knowledgeable about the community and the university. With this knowledge, we urge listeners
to be connected with both the surrounding Robeson County community and the University of
North Carolina at Pembroke.

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References
Create a Pie Chart. (n.d.). Retrieved November 21, 2014, from
http://www.meta-chart.com/pie. Web.
Libsyn - Podcast Hosting Services. (n.d.). Retrieved November 21, 2014, from
https://www.libsyn.com. Web.