Not to be a know-it-all, but…
That’s a line only a true know-it-all would
open with.
Heritage Classroom. Massie Heritage Center. Savannah, Georgia. National Register of
Historic Places (April 13, 1977). Photographed by Stephen Milligan (September 26,
2015). |
Not to be a know-it-all, but the first
module for the Teaching Multimedia course was pretty much a review for me. I’ve been advising my school’s newspaper
since 2003, so I know it all.
Protecting sources? Know it.
Maintaining objectivity? Know
it. Cutline? Know it.
I thought this was a multimedia course, not
an introduction to journalism! I had
visions of immersing myself in technology that would help me help my newspaper students
class up our little online paper with interactive elements and slideshows and
video—video taken by my Broadcast Journalism I class on our fancy new audio and
video equipment (if we can ever cut the purchase order from the confines of district
red tape). And I would be able to use all
of these new audio and video editing skills I had hoped to acquire in this
course with the broadcasting students, too.
Our first broadcast would be so professional that people at school would
think they had mistakenly tuned in to CNN, not WWJK News.
So far, we’re learning journalism basics. Easy.
This course must be for journalistic greenhorns, not a know-it-all like
me!
Then I got to Task 4: View these live links.
The very first link took me to a list
entitled “Multimedia Tools.” I was dazed as I examined the list—I’d only
heard of a few of these resources (and that few includes Google Maps). But weren’t these the very same resources I’d
hoped to be exposed to during this course?
My smugness at being familiar with basic
journalism concepts continued to fade as I delved into “Tutorial: Multimedia Storytelling: Learn the Secrets from Experts,” the next link. This is where I learned how complex putting
together a multimedia story package can be.
Shells and storyboards and fieldwork!
Oh, my!
But the kicker came when I investigated the
“Best Online High School Newspapers” link. What incredible journalism these high school
students are engaging in! The sites
showcased here are so professional looking—with movement, photography, Twitter
feeds, scrolling updates on sports scores…even live broadcasts. But isn’t this, too, what I wanted to
learn? The tools and training to help my
student staff build a snazzy journalism program—nay, a media empire—are before
me in this course, the very course in which I had, only days before, thought I
had known it all!
Now, I realize I am just one of the
greenhorns. This course is exactly what
I need as a teacher to help my students bring our online newspaper to a higher
level of quality, to start this broadcasting program off in an innovative
fashion, to entice the introductory journalism students to continue in the
program, and to engage our audience with newsworthy content delivered in a
fresh, exciting way.
But before that happens, this know-it-all
has a lot to learn.
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