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After School Enrichment Curriculum and Ideas
-By Mike DeBritz on Monday, May 07, 2012
Here's a quick video on how to break the cookie jar for the classroom version of the "Cookie Jar Mystery."
In module 1, "The Crime Scenario" you'll start off by mocking up the crime scene to recreate the heinous crime that happened in Mrs. Johnson's classroom!
-By Mike DeBritz on Monday, April 23, 2012
If you need to reach out and involve more High School (or mature Middle School) students this summer, we have a great
opportunity!
Our Screenwriting for Short Video: An Introduction for Teens kit has everything you need to run an engaging mini course on this high interest topic!
This 10-unit program is designed to engage older students in a highly participatory and intriguing study of movie-making. Kids know when they like a film...after taking this class they'll understand why!
Our approach to the weekly activities is to first introduce students to concepts of screenwriting like the three-act structure, creating characters and writing dialogue.
Then students will look at award-winning teen-produced movies as examples. This drives each concept home but also helps students visualize themselves sitting in the director's chair.
Next students participate in a critique, and move to working on applying these concepts to their own short video scripts.
In ten fun-filled weeks, students will walk away with a working knowledge of video storytelling and complete a script with a meaningful theme, characters and scenes ready to shoot!
We've worked hard to make this kit affordable and easy to maintain for future use. The complete package, which includes materials for a class of 20 students, is only $695!
To learn more about this program and review the detailed program outline, click here. Or if you're inspired, click here to order!
-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, November 09, 2011
-Guest Post by Shelly Rafferty Withers
One game that has found its way onto the early evening couch at our house is one we call simply “Screenwriter.”
After dinner, like millions of other American families, my 15-year-old and I routinely settle down to catch a couple of hours of television. Playfully, Jake and I tease each other about “who committed the crime” “who will end up with whom” or even what crazy outcome will befall the protagonists of “The Big Bang Theory,” “CSI Miami,” or “Terra Nova.”
See, we’ve come to fancy ourselves as screenwriters: We have learned to correctly predict what’s going to happen during a TV episode (and even some commercials!) before the end of a show.
And we come by this title honestly.
Over the last year, Jake acted as my right-hand man as I wrote and constructed Community Learning’s new “Screenwriting for Short Video” course. In the course, which covers everything from plotting and action development, to characters and dialogue, Jake and I have role-played all the examples, reviewed all the films together, and even drafted some short scripts.
The result, not surprisingly, is that Jake’s become a kind of screenwriting wizard. He understands story structure; he recognizes foreshadowing devices; he’s got a newfound interest in reading movie reviews (in the New York Times, no less!); and suddenly, he’s some kind of expert in his English class when it comes to the finer points of understanding narrative.
“It’s really a cool course,” I heard him tell his friends recently as he popped in the DVD (it comes in the Course Kit). He handed out copies of the Film Critic’s Scorecard to his visiting friends. “Let’s look at this zombie movie,” he encouraged them. “Then we can compare our scores!”
I passed out the popcorn as the boys took to their task. Afterwards, one of them said, “We should be doing this in school.”
I nodded, smiling. Yes, I thought, you should.
-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Lesson Structure
To make this course easy to teach in an after school setting, we designed a format that promotes active learning, discussions and clear goals for high school students.
Every lesson in Screenwriting for Short Video begins with an overview of the goals for the day and the timeline in which students should accomplish these tasks:
Activity 1 – Notes to the Student
-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, October 12, 2011
(Preface from our new course Screenwriting for Short Video: An Introduction for Teens)
Hardly a day goes by when we don’t read another article about the digitization of our media culture, about how videos and I-Pads are corrupting the brains of adolescents, and how cell phones have driven all of us to distraction. Simultaneously, smart phones and video cameras, MP3 players and social networking applications are an undeniable fixture of 21st century life. The question that confronts all of us—teachers, parents, community leaders and youth workers, and more—is how to harness teens’ enthusiasm for new media in ways that support their educations, their literacy and their futures?
Video—as delivered through YouTube, in particular—has captured the imaginations of a generation of teenagers, and spawned a widespread and enthusiastic interest in the film-making enterprise. For many teens, these interests are satisfied by a simple-minded point-and shoot video of their friends performing stupid human tricks. Serendipity, more than storytelling, characterizes these accidental video products.
The vast majority of videos, however, which succeed on a number of levels, do so because they are under pinned by clever conceptualization, compelling stories and plots, beautiful sets and camera work, and well planned screenplays.
Screenwriting for Short Video is a course that underlines for young people the critical, step-by-step planning and creative work essential to producing a five-to-ten minute film. With an emphasis on storytelling technique, the course re-invigorates teens’ enthusiasm for elegant writing, sharp dialogue, plot lines, quirky characters and thoughtful planning and control. Too, the course points to regular performance targets in each lesson, which cumulatively lead students to complete their brief screenplays.
Screenwriting is first and foremost a skill of writing. Consequently, students who take this course will sharpen their composition skills, as well as gain an appreciation for fiction, dialogue, spelling, grammar, colloquialisms, character development through stories, narrative technique, planning, journaling, pre-writing, and many other activities related to improving their communication skills.
The course also calls upon the evaluation skills of adolescents. In every lesson, teens screen a new film (also made by adolescents) and are given the opportunity to discuss and critique the film. On the Film Critic’s Scorecard, teens not only rate the film they watch, but they must also provide a rationale for their rating. On a cognitive level, evaluation is one of the higher–order thinking skills, and cultivating this skill encourages teens to develop insights, reasoning and powers of observation that will continue to serve them throughout their academic careers.
Most important, Screenwriting for Short Video is designed to exploit the creativity and innovativeness of its participants. The course offers many artistic and exploratory activities: from structuring movie posters to interpreting dialogue, from planning with storyboards to providing live “staged readings” of student screenplays. This empowering course recognizes the gifts and boundless energy of adolescents, and celebrates their inventiveness, imaginations, and independence.
We believe in teens!
-By Mike DeBritz on Wednesday, October 05, 2011
If you’re thinking about creating a club or offering a movie making class there are a number of considerations. I know the first thing running through most directors’ minds would be “Who can I find to teach this?”
After the basic logistics are worked out around curriculum and personnel, the next thing needed is a solid promotional plan. How can you get the message out to the kids you want to attend, especially if they don’t currently attend your program?
Here’s where it gets a little tricky. What incentive or motivation do they have, especially upper elementary and high school age, to stop whatever they’re currently doing to attend your program?
First think about the old adage. “Scarcity Sells.” Promote your program as a special offering with limited space, say 15 spots. Advertise that interested parties need to attend two informational sessions before they can apply to the program. In these sessions, your teacher will communicate that a dedicated effort is required and is the only way they can produce a decent product.
Students need to fully commit (within reason) to the entire program for that quarter or block. Now of course you may have more spots and don’t really want to exclude participation but making it clear real work will be done sends a strong message.
Next you want to highlight the benefits of dedicating some energy to your movie making class by showing them what’s possible with student film examples. Use your two informational sessions to run through a couple of different genres like drama or comedy just like the Emmys.
This may dissuade some students, but hopefully you’ve inspired many more and have the right mix of kids that are truly interested in being there and doing the work.
Now with your dedicated core, you can tackle the question “What kind of movie do you want to make?” This will set in motion ideas about characters, scenes and dialogue. Now your young film makers are on their way!
After that initial year, you’ll have some of your own local films to entice students the following year.
Below are just a handful of links to film festivals that are always looking for teen films. Many have student film examples you can preview and use to kickoff your program.
Good Luck!
Youth Film Festivals and Contests
http://www.thedirectorintheclassroom.com/festivals4.php
http://247youthfilmfestival.tumblr.com/
http://www.nwfilm.org/festivals/youngfestival/
http://www.westportyouthfilmfest.org/
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