G322 Foundation Portfolio in Video Production (OCR Media Conference 2009)
1. A/S Media Studies
G322 Foundation Portfolio in Video Production
OCR Conference Workshop by Nina Moore
AST/Head of Media and Film at Welling School
Session Aims and rationale:
This session will explore ways in which to deliver the new G322 Foundation Production
Portfolio âVideo productionâ unit, through close analysis of student work from âWelling
Schoolâ. Reflecting honestly on the experiences for both students and teaching staff, Nina
Moore (AST and Head of Media and Film) will offer experiential insight into the learning curve
afforded this year by offering this pathway, and provide delegates with useful hints and tips
that will help you and your students to realise success. The session will conclude with a Q&A
session.
The Brief:
Preliminary exercise:
Continuity task involving filming and editing a character opening a door, crossing a room and
sitting down in a chair opposite another character, with whom she/he then exchanges a
couple of lines of dialogue. This task should demonstrate match on action, shot/reverse shot
and the 180-degree rule.
Main task:
The titles and opening of a new fiction film, to last a maximum of two minutes.
All video and audio material must be original, produced by the candidate(s), with the
exception of music or audio effects from a copyright-free source.
The presentation of the research, planning and evaluation may take the form of any one,
or combination of two or more, of the following:
a presentation using slideshow software such as PowerPoint;
âą
a blog or website;
âą
a podcast
âą
a DVD with âextrasâ
âą
Key questions the brief raised for my team:
1. How should the continuity sequence be taught? How much time will this take?
2. How can we access quality copyright free music? What resources do we have
access to in order to create original music?
3. What technical skills do we need to develop on the staff team in order to effectively
motivate students to adopt a culture of blogging?
4. Will the school/LEA ICT systems/firewalls support this style of working?
5. Will students be able to access blogging software at school? Will students be able to
access complimentary sites like YouTube in order to embed opening title sequences
into their blogs?
6. How will we ensure that students create content that is appropriate? How will we
quality assure/monitor their content?
2. 7. How will we monitor âResearch and Planningâ progress and undertake AFL?
8. What about the âtechnophobesâ â how will students not confident with NMT cope
with the demands of blogging?
9. Will all students have access to ICT facilities at home? How can the department best
support those that donât?
10. How will students complete the main task in order to establish an understanding of
continuity â one day shoots with staff? Implications for staff cover? Impact on
learning and teaching within department and other faculties?
11. What location permissions need to be sought? By when? Who will manage this?
Staff/students?
12. Student numbers and impact on technology resources â cameras/tripods etc? How
will we manage equipment loans to ensure that all groups experience equity in
access to filming equipment?
13. Editing time â what systems do we need to put in place to ensure equality of access
to editing facilities? What is a reasonable editing time frame?
14. When will we schedule âreflective critâ sessions to assess completed work? How
much time should students have to refine their work?
15. What methodologies should students employ to evaluate their learning and
productions?
Recommendations for the Continuity Sequence
Keep the âContinuity Sequenceâ simple. Students always want to complicate
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matters by turning the sequence into a âgenreâ piece with props, costumes etc. This is
not necessary and will waste valuable time. This sequence can be shot and edited in a
double (2 hour) lesson once the key concepts of continuity have been explored and
fully understood.
Encourage students to upload their âContinuityâ sequence onto their blog. This can be
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achieved by saving the footage in a web streaming format and posting it onto the
blog.
Recommendations for Blogging
At Welling School, âbloggingâ has become central to our teaching and learning
pedagogy and this A/S brief was the catalyst that moved us away from our traditional
âsketchbookâ approach to the dynamic, versatile, multi-media capabilities of âbloggingâ.
Below are some recommendations to help you make a smooth transition into the world
of âbloggingâ with some teaching and learning ideas that helped my team to maximize
the potential of this fantastic tool.
Use âBlogspot.comâ or âWord pressâ (free blogging platforms) to create a bespoke
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departmental blog which will serve as a platform for:
a. the sharing of learning resources, links, opening title sequences (via YouTube),
PowerPoint presentations (via Slideshare) with students and other staff on your team
b. accessing student blogs through a single centralised area
c. showcasing and celebrating student work as it develops
See the Welling School âNoodleâ as an example:
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http://6thformnoodle.blogspot.com
Get all students to create a personal âResearch and Planningâ blog specifically for this
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project and to e-mail their blog address to you for entry on the central departmental
blog.
3. Using the âDashboardâ area (Blogspot), select a gadget âListâ and paste all blog
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addresses into this single area. There is the capacity for blogs to show dates/times
when updated so that you can easily navigate what students are active in their
blogging and those who are not. This saves time and means that you donât have to
constantly click and visit student blogs in order to see whether or not they have done
what has been asked.
Provide opportunity for one-to-one support at lunchtimes/ after school for students
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who are RESISTANT to, or lack confidence in blogging (blogophobics). There will no
doubt be one student who will find âbloggingâ a tricky concept and need more support
in understanding the technology. It is imperative that you are familiar with the
technology to best support students. If you are not familiar with blogging â begin now!
Set-up a âCode of conductâ or âGuidelinesâ that students sign to ensure that blog
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content is appropriate, clean and adopts a âprofessionalâ mode of address. Some
students see the blog as an extension of social networking sites and will use
inappropriate names in their blog title (nicknames), inappropriate language in their
postings and put unnecessary widgets/games and links on their blog. They need to
know from the outset that this is a âwork areaâ rather than a personal blog and that it
must therefore conform to a set of âschool/collegeâ expectations. Your students are
visual to the online community and in this capacity must be ambassadors for your
school/college.
Establish a framework of expectations in terms of language, grammar and
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punctuation. Students have a tendency to use âtxtâ speak and adopt a casual and
informal tone and mode of address that is not always appropriate for a blog that
essentially is their showcase and window into their production processes.
Show students how to add labels in order to âZONEâ their blogs making it easier for
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external viewers to navigate their way around the various postings.
Create âBlogger of the Weekâ Awards to celebrate active and creative blogging. At
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Welling School this took the form of a collection of badges that students fought to
collect! (Cheap, fun and creates some healthy online competition)
Use student blogs to undertake regular peer assessment. A great starter activity is to
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get students to log onto their respective blogs and then in pairs to âCritiqueâ each
others blog by adding evaluative comments on a particular posting.
Ask students to post a weekly âcritiqueâ of a title sequence on their blog OR get
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teams/individuals to present a different sequence at the start/plenary of each lesson.
Create your own blog assessment criteria that allows students to understand how they
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can improve their blogging. At Welling we used a fun system â a set of definitions
4. labeling student blogs as those that suffer from âBlogstipationâ, âBlogorrheaâ,
âBlogopotumus Syndromeâ and those that are âBlogbustersâ. See the following urban
dictionary for more ideas to personalise your success criteria:
http://www.urbandictionary.com
Encourage students to personalise their blog pages in Photoshop with âSaul Bassâ
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graphics, a genre theme or palette/visual style/background inspired by film. This
provides greater ownership of the online journal and allows students to experiment
with representing their chosen genre.
Share best practice and celebrate creativity by regularly showing blogs as part of your
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lesson routine.
Provide students with a differentiated stepped model of âblogging successâ criteria. I
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like to use the MUST, SHOULD, COULD approach as outlined here:
YOUR BLOG MUST INCLUDE:
Critical analysis of the work of Saul Bass
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Evidence of research into similar media texts and analysis of their forms and
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conventions
A logline for your film idea/concept and or a mind-map exploring narrative/character
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development
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Draft storyboards and plans
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A comprehensive set of posts outlining the processes in the development of your
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film and the decisions and revisions made
YOUR CONTINUITY SEQUENCE
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YOUR BLOG SHOULD INCLUDE:
Location shots
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Casting Shots
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A filmed animatic with camera movement/cuts and sound
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Second/third draft storyboards
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Music choices discussion and analysis with audio extracts
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The first cut of your sequence with analysis
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Detailed critique of the developmental process with reflective commentary on the
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decisions and revisions made.
Exploration of why opening title sequences are so important to the film industry?
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Photographs of the shoot - you in action!
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Shooting schedule
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Mini-evaluative postings showing reflective thought processes throughout the
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project
Evidence of audience profiling
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YOUR BLOG COULD INCLUDE:
Thorough audience research exploring the relationship between opening title
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sequences and spectator responses to film.
A detailed audience profile drawing upon sociographic and psychographic profiling
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techniques.
Audience responses to your finished film.
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Evidence into 'Film Production' processes undertaking a case study into a specific
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studio or film and tracking its production, distribution and marketing strategies.
5. Ideas for integrating ORIGINAL or COPYRIGHT FREE MUSIC
Students from Welling School really enjoyed the challenge of sourcing music, and or
creating an original soundtrack. This process afforded an opportunity for dynamic skill
acquisition when students worked alongside music students in the composition of
original scores. It afforded a unique opportunity to really explore how deeper meaning
could be achieved through music and how emotive responses to the visuals could be
anchored.
There are a wealth of copyright free music sites online. However, we found the best
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one to be through lgfl (London Grid for Learning): http://www.lgflmusic.org.uk
Try to negotiate access to music facilities in your school /college particularly if you
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have âMusic Techâ facilities. This is a nice opportunity to undertake some meaningful
cross-curricular work and have other students compose, perform and record original
scores for Media students.
Encourage media students already in bands and or groups to compose and record
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their own music.
Useful Resources:
Opening Title Sequence Sites:
This is a fantastic site dedicated to showcasing the art of title sequences. Each image
captures the essence on the sequence and when clicked provides access to the streamed
sequence. Each title is accompanied by an short analytical commentary and
http://www.artofthetitle.com/about/
http://mmbase.submarinechannel.com/titlesequences/
âThank you for Smokingâ and âJunoâ title sequence site:
http://www.shadowplaystudio.com/smoking.html
http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/12/19/30-unforgettable-movie-title-sequences/
Free Blogging platforms to set-up departmental and student blogs:
https://www.blogger.com/start
http://wordpress.com/
âBlogspotâ Tutorial for content creation
http://pulsed.blogspot.com/2007/08/blogger-layout-tutorial.html
Sixth Form Blogs
Welling School Blogs
http://6thformnoodle.blogspot.com
http://mediadoodle.blogspot.com
Longroad Media
www.longroadmedia.com
Keynote Speaker Details:
Nina Moore
AST/Head of Media and Film
Welling School
Elsa Road
Welling
Kent
DA16 1LB
mooren@welling.bexley.sch.uk
Tel: 0208 3048531