Tag Archives: filmmaking

Digital Storytelling Blog Carnival #2

Welcome to the second installment of the Digital Storytelling Blog Carnival. Some have correctly noted that I’m using the terms digital storytelling here synonymously with digital filmmaking. Whatever you want to call it, the technology gets cheaper and easier to use everyday.

Here’s another assortment of articles for beginners and pros alike. Enjoy!

Getting Started

What is Digital Storytelling Film? from Joe Dale.

A Podcast from Educase about the potential for Web 2.0 and Digital Storytelling and how to relate it to assessment.

My Head is Spinning…But I’m Loving It (on the process of beginning to integrate digital storytelling in the classroom) by Greg Oz.

Film Techniques

Marco Torres’s Flickschool offers this film on wide, medium, and close-up shots. Make sure you’re varying your shots.

The Door Scene, a fantastic way of teaching filmmaking to teachers and students from the American Film Institute’s Screen Ed Series. See my own doors scene here.

Teaching Techniques

Wes Fryer looks at Digital Storytelling from the Eyes of a Child.

The Making Of

Clay Animation Podcast from Video in the Classroom.com interviews with Greg Paulsen, Kevin Hodgson, and Carolyn Daly.

Kevin Hodgson looks at using powerpoint as a digital storytelling tool in Powerpoint As Movie.

Examples
Storytelling with a SmartBoard from Ms. Taylor’s Classroom.

Monster projects from Terry Smith’s 4th grade classroom.

Podcasts on famous explorers from David Kaupler’s 5th graders and a 3rd grade animated project on the life cycle of a butterfly (made using Garageband and iMovie).

Lucy Gray’s Robomance Clay Animation Project.

Kenya Escape Through Digital Storytelling by Scott Floyd.

Tools

Collaborative VoiceThread: What Could It Mean? from Langwitches.

Animoto, who would’ve thought it would be so controversial? A critical look at Animoto by Dan Meyer.

Larry Ferlazzo expands digital storytelling even further to include online Comic Book Maker, Pixton.  Here’s his review. 

Technically Speaking

Digital Cameras: Quality and Options from Learn Digital Photography Now.

How to use a Greenscreen presented in Cool Cat Teacher’s Blog using a video by Dean Shareski.

Camera Stabilization on the Cheap (thanks to Steven Katz for link).Clay Burrel’s film, “Cutting the Crap from Student Movies” shows how to donwload Youtube clips and creative commons licensed materials.

Music is Not for Insects presents this article resolving issues using Flip Video with iMovie ’08.

Contest Alert

The Generation Yes Blog shares the TechLearning Moviemaking contest.

Links

Stories for Change, a site to join and share films about social justice.

Elona Hartjes, an inspiring Canadian educator, submits this link to F.I.L.M. (Finding Inspiration in Film) and explains how it has helped her students.

Network

If you’re a member of Classroom 2.0, please join the Video in the Classroom group to network with other educators using video in their classrooms.

That’s All Folks

Join us again next month.

Submit your articles for the next carnival here.

See Digital Storytelling Carnival #1 here.

And see you at CUE (Computer Using Educators) Conference if you’re going.

AFI Screen Education: Worthwhile Professional Development

I had the opportunity to participate in a one day workshop this past weekend presented by Frank Guttler at the American Film Institute in Los Feliz. I went because it was free for me, it sounded cool to go the American Film Institute, and it was a chance to see my Apple Distinguished Educator colleagues who I haven’t seen since Apple Camp.

Being an NYU film school dropout and no stranger to filmmaking, the techinques were not new. However, it made me very conscious of the ways in which I use film to tell stories and gave me a way of explaining what I do in terms which students and other teachers can understand. I saw how my colleagues went from having a very narrow sense of film language to being able to analyze scenes with depth and complexity within the course of a day. (I could’ve saved 32 thousand dollars had I had this workshop before NYU). I think the workshop will make me a far better professional developer in this area in the future. I’m already thinking of how I will revamp portions of my upcoming workshops at LACOE on integrating technology in the Open Court program (more about those later).

While I have always taught potential project ideas and how to plan digital storytelling projects around Open Court units I think that there is much value in teaching students and teachers film language because of the higher level thinking involved. Previously I frowned upon teachers simply creating retellings of stories in the anthology, preferring to advocate for sequels, commercials, public service announcements, and other kinds of parallel stories which involve more than simply remembering but get to synthesizing and applying on Bloom’s Taxonomy. If teachers and students take the time to evaluate their shots and decisions they make in planning and filming projects I see how students could get to higher level thinking even with retellings of stories. For example, (from first grade, Games unit) students might make decisions to portray Matthew and Tilly’s faces up close and distorted when they are fighting with each other to show how ugly their fighting is. This would show a deeper understanding of the story than simply setting up a camera and reading the dialogue from the book.

If you have the opportunity to attend one of these AFI workshops at a conference or other event in the future I recommend that you take it even if you have to pay. Whether you are a novice or complete beginner there’s something to be gained and it’s also a lot of fun. Also, know that if you have access United Streaming (or decide to get a free 30 day trial) and search for AFI you already have access to the almost the entire curriculum.

Here is our one minute film made with strict paramaters and in camera editing. (I did take out five seconds using iMovie ’08 when I got home).

Download The Door