Our community talent show is in its third year of making money for projects that serve students in the school. As adviser to the Junior National Honor Society, the sponsoring group, I am in charge of the event. With my current break from classroom duties, I've had some additional time to add digital tools to make the job easier. I maintain a wiki for the group, applications and ticket sales are online courtesy of GoogleDocs forms, and audition times were scheduled online with Doodle. I created a MovieMaker video to solicit entries in the talent show.
I was familiar with MovieMaker. I staged the pictures with two willing NJHS members and used PicMonkey to make the photos black and white for a unified look. It was only my second try at adding narration, but I was not learning something entirely new. The only thing that I had to learn for this video was how to upload to YouTube so it could be shared easily.
The movie I created from the audition films required me to learn two things: how to capture still pictures from the video and how to clip audio files from the videos. I resorted to the snipping tool to capture pictures--not completely satisfying because the severely cropped pictures ended up with a lot of black space in the MovieMaker frames. I would have saved myself a lot of trouble if we had taken still pictures the night of auditions.
I got so frustrated with the audio portion that my husband wisely avoided me while I googled for help. When I read that audio can't be separated from video, I was ready to quit. In the end, what worked was JUST MESSING AROUND! I dragged the entire video to the audio track and then shortened and faded the audio on the track.
It's had 39 views in the day that it's been up, and I believe I have viewed it at least that many times just out of a sense of accomplishment.
When speaking about people who make things, Mark Frauenfelder says, "Most people loathe failing so much they avoid trying things that require pushing past their current abilities. It's no coincidence that many of my favorite DIYers either dropped out of or never attended college. A few even dropped out of high school. Maybe they were lucky to have escaped the educational system; in school, mistakes result in punishment in the form of poor grades. Because we've been trained to believe that mistakes must be avoided, many of us don't want to attempt to make or fix things, or we quit soon after we start, because our initial attempts end in failure" (20).
The day I spent learning to make a one minute movie was exhausting and messy. I have yet to order the chaos on my desk, but I am certain that I will make more attempts because the result was so satisfying. I was present when a group of high-school students watched the piece, and there was an audible "Oh" when the cute preschooler appears. Precisely the reaction I was hoping for--people will come to the show to watch cute kids!
I prefer order. What does my classroom look like if I let my students get as messy as I did?
Frauenfelder, Mark. Made by Hand: My Adventures in the World of Do-it-yourself. New York: Portfolio/Penguin, 2011.
This ties in so much with a point I took from Troy Hicks in the Digital Writing Workshop last summer. Sometimes the best PD seems to be just playing around with tools, an endeavor which is often a "messy" process. Sadly, teachers don't always have the time to experiment in the way you describe. Additionally, I think the thought of a messy experiment with technology is scary to a lot of teachers, even those like myself who consider themsleves fairly tech-forward. Messy is risky, but no risk=no reward a lot of the time, eh?
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