Paradise Lost Digital Storytelling Series: Second Try, Thanks to Feedback

After my first outing doing a rather “schooly” self-assignment for AP Literature, I got what I asked for: friendly and constructive criticism – “assessment”? – from Dean Shareski, Bud Hunt, AnneO, Diane Cordell, and my flat world team-teacher/blood brother Chris Watson – all whom I thank for taking the time.

So you’ll notice these changes:

1. No scrolling text. Instead, I used iMovie’s “Music Video” editing option. One bothering limitation in that option is a ten-second maximum duration for each block of text. Another is the slider for text size – a numeric text-size option would be nicer for uniformity’s sake. (Dean suggested no text at all, or subtitles. Since I want my students to have the option of reading along as they listen, I chose to stick with the text. But I didn’t like the scroll either. Subtitles would have taken forever to add, line by line. Thus the “music video” devil’s bargain.)

2. Less jumpy transitions. On my first try, I learned the time-consuming lesson that all text edits over images are erased if you put transitions before or after a clip. I also learned something about measuring the duration of some lines of recital first, and then adding images with those durations set. I also reduced the use of the Ken Burns effect, because that effect consumes a lot of time, and is often damaged when fades or dissolves are added to them.

3. (This one was tough:) I added some editorial and “teacher-y” stuff in there for my students. It goes against the opposing desire to make this an entertainment piece for all. (And it just occured to me I could have easily exported a straight recitation, then added the teacher stuff to a second schooly version. Damn.)

So here’s the next installment, this time on YouTube instead of Google Video (for you comparison shoppers out there):

Paradise Lost, Book 4 (episode 2): Satan Enters Paradise

This one is about four minutes long. It took me about four hours. Feedback still welcome! (And feel free to read my AP Literature students’ feedback on our open class Ning.)

To Reflect a Bit More:

I’m still wondering about the overall value of digital storytelling. I know that for me, at least, I record the readings over and over, never quite satisfied, discovering an inflection better placed here than there, and so forth. But I have to say, it does get tiresome. Maybe that’s the fault of the parameters I’ve set: reciting someone else’s work, limiting it to still images, voice-over, and text. Not what I’d call a very in-demand real-world skill. (Or am I wrong?)

(I’m also curious how many of you out there who have assigned a digital storytelling project have tried one – or more – yourselves. And what your impressions were after the attempt. Comments?)

I really want to start playing with actual filmmaking: scripts, shots, storyboards, the whole bit. That would be far less schooly, and surely far more engaging. Yet I look at so much “crap” when students (and others) are given a camera and told to make a real film, I don’t think I would assign that to students without some very tight scaffolding and staging. But somebody – was it Dean? – mentions the “Don’t give them a camera until they’ve given you a storyboard” rule in this year’s K-12 Online Conference, don’t they?

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  1. Doing as I Say: Digital Storytelling iMovie Practice with Paradise Lost
  2. “Escape” – a digital storytelling sketch
  3. Fine-tuning the “Cutting the Crap” Movie-Making Tutorials
  4. Digital Arts Menu for Multiple Intelligences Wiki: Please Contribute Your Favorites!

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6 Responses to “Paradise Lost Digital Storytelling Series: Second Try, Thanks to Feedback”

  1. diane writes:

    Clay,

    I’m not an auditory learner, so the text is a necessary part of the mix for me.

    I think I’d like it better if the teacher prompts and comments were at the end, in a slightly different, more matter-of-fact tone to contrast with the drama of the poem itself.

    We won’t know how students might do until some of them try it, but could a dramatic reading be one of a few options? Not everyone is a gifted performer – Milton done in certain squeaky or squealy voices might be unintentionally ludicrous!

    diane

    Reply

  2. Ann O writes:

    It’s amazing how long it takes to do these short projects. I liked the transitions better in this one. The writing is a little hard to read. There’s a lot of white on white.

    I wonder how much longer it would take to create the two versions – straight reading and then the teacher comments edition. It nice to just sit back and take in the reading. Having the option to hear teacher comments would be nice, but it might add a lot of development time.

    Nice job.

    Reply

  3. Clay Burell writes:

    Good comments both. Something about using colored font feels aesthetically off, but after viewing the shrunken YouTube or GV version, I see the need for SOME solution (you can see the text fine in iMovie, before condensing). This is one of the limitations of iMovie, though. It’s a great little tool, but it’s still consumer level, not pro.

    Diane, I hear you on the silly oversight of giving “Cathredral” audio effect to teachery commentary as well as Miltonic song. Silly, silly, silly. But again, an indication of how difficult, really, doing one of these in a short turn-around time is.

    Thanks both :)

    Reply

  4. On the Stager and Richardson UStream "Bootleg" | Beyond School writes:

    [...] Paradise Lost Digital Storytelling Series: Second Try, Thanks to Feedback [...]

  5. diane writes:

    Clay,

    Remember our old friend, ToonDoo?
    http://tinyurl.com/2rd3cc

    diane

    Reply

  6. YouTube - Paradise Lost, Book 4: Satan Enters Paradise writes:

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