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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
April
New U. of I. video writing
class draws diverse group of students
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
4/3/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
As a former New York documentary filmmaker and media
educator in community settings with underserved youth,
Maria Lovett was, she said, inspired to design a college
course that would give her the opportunity to “help
students appreciate what they already know –
their lived experience – and provide them with
new tools to share and investigate their points of
view.” She and Joseph Squier, a professor of
art and of English, collaborated on the course. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Instructors for an experimental new composition course at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign now know firsthand the power
of the well-known movie line, “if you build it, they will come.”
What the educators built was a new course, Art 199: “Writing
With Video” (WWV). The students have flocked to it from a
diverse range of majors: art and design, cinema studies, computer science,
creative writing, media studies and psychology.
Such diversity is a good thing, said Maria Lovett, one of the creators
of the course, because it “adds unique contributions to classroom
discussions.”
“The media and cinema students in particular report how grateful
they are to be able to put some of the theoretical knowledge they have
gained from their other courses into practice.”
As a former New York documentary filmmaker and media educator in community
settings with underserved youth, Lovett was, she said, inspired to design
a college course that would give her the opportunity to “help
students appreciate what they already know – their lived experience
– and provide them with new tools to share and investigate their
points of view.”
“Providing access to video production allows students to ‘re-world’
or ‘re-present’ their world in response to the pervasive
representations that flood popular culture.”
The classroom is “a fluid environment,” she said, “where
we learn from each other and use our own experiences and our own ‘ways
of seeing’ as points of departure for conversations on a more
macro level.”
Lovett, now working toward a doctorate in educational
policy studies at Illinois, feels that too often learning environments
are structured on the “top-down, hierarchical model,” but
by offering new user-friendly inscription technologies, “WWV challenges
this, and we do our best to make this distinction evident in all aspects
of the class – not just through video production, but also through
the writing, the class discussions and critiques.
“Ironically, I find that some that some students resist this new
– or, as they may see it, lack of – structure, but by doing
our best to ‘reveal the frame’ of the class practice and
pedagogy behind it, I notice that the process and knowledge exchange
become very empowering – for the students and the educators.”
Julia Burns, a junior in psychology, signed up for WWV because it looked
like an especially interesting class and because she enjoys taking courses
outside of her major – “especially courses that let me be
creative.”
Burns recently screened her first video for her classmates. The piece,
titled “Orange” and something akin to “A Day in the
Life of an Orange,” was inspired by discussions in a psychology
class about the cognitive awareness of death. Burns was anxious before
she showed her video, concerned that she had gone about the project
in the wrong way.
But art and design
professor Joseph Squier, the other instructor, disabused her of that,
calling the video a “very interesting piece – quite lovely,
poetic, having an interesting world vision, but too long in places.”
“Time is always a challenge,” Squier said.
Not quite halfway through the semester, Burns already has learned a
great deal about the technical aspects of creating a short film.
“Before this class, the most I could do with a video camera was
turn it on and use the zoom,” she said. “I’m especially
enjoying learning how to use the editing software, because it brings
so much to the finished work. We also have studied some history and
theory of film and art.”
But the most important thing she’s gotten from the class, she
said, is “the confidence to attempt to make my projects as good
as I imagine them being when I am brainstorming.”
“I’ve also learned to not be afraid of showing my personal
work to my classmates and allowing my classmates to critique it. I think
it is really important to learn to be able to take constructive criticism
on very personal projects.”
Christopher Earnhart’s video was accompanied by his original poem
titled, “the wide world Web.” Borrowing techniques from
advertising, including the notion of the passive model, Earnhart, a
senior in psychology and sociology, created a video meditation on the
Internet as a valuable resource, but one that is too often misused or
underused.
After he and the class viewed the video, Squier critiqued it, describing
it as “ambitious and admirable, although as a piece of communication,
a bit confusing.”
Teaching assistant Martha Webber suggested that one way Earnhart could
clarify his meaning would be for him to pull out some key lines from
his poem, lines that have the most impact. “Words will help us
contextualize these images,” she said.
Hannah Bellwoar, another teaching assistant, was concerned about the
repetitions in the video, and wondered if they advanced the story. The
audio quality was uneven, she said, and too often she lost words.
The idea for the course came out of conversations between Squier and
Lovett in the summer of 2004, shortly after Lovett’s arrival at
Illinois.
“We fell into discussion about our mutual interest – video
– and soon discovered a shared belief in the power of video as
a rhetorical medium,” Squier said. “Somehow we hatched this
crazy plan to develop a video course that harnessed the power of both
video and writing and to conceptualize it as an advanced composition
course.”
In addition to reading, writing, shooting and editing, the students
immerse themselves in the world of video being published on the Internet.
The WWV course has just been approved for general education credit in
two categories: advanced composition and humanities and the arts. Four
sections of Art 250: Writing With Video, will be offered in the fall.
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