sophomore class project
For almost 3 hours after school, on a beautiful spring Friday (and might I add that it was the first sun we’ve seen in weeks), there were ten 10th graders up in my room working on last minute edits for their documentary film segments. And no one complained.
The discussions were about how to pare down the 30 minutes of film down to 5 and how to find music that wasn’t copyright protected. One group used my old Mac (I’m never giving it up) and used GarageBand to create their own music. It actually sounds pretty good!
Jill’s group had a discussion about the ethics of cutting out the phrase “if global warming is real” for part of their segment. After about 15 minutes of going back and forth, they decided that it would be misrepresenting their interviewee if they edited that part out, so they left it in. I was proud of them for their conclusion, and of myself for letting them reach it by themselves.
Jenny’s group had 2 expert interviews and really had to work to cut everything down. They kept announcing “We’re down to 17 minutes” then “Oh no! We forgot about Kent–now we’re back up to 37!” and then finally “Five minutes!” They’ve really had to decide what is important and essential to their argument in order to keep the segment at 5 minutes. It will be interesting if I can see if any of these skills transfers to their writing. But who knows. . . it’s so difficult to account for what influences what.
Kelsey’s group finished early–they were doing their narration, so I didn’t see much of them. They had to find a quiet place downstairs–in my room it was a bit raucous with all of the editing and composing and discussion going on.
The other two groups had put time in earlier in the week. I assume they are ready to go.
Our preview screening will take place on Monday–and then after that, it’s opening night (or at least opening morning). Jill made an invitation. The kids are supposed to post the information so that their local blog readers might attend if they wish. We already have one RSVP! I guess I better clean for company ![]()
I will be at North tomorrow for Julie Parks’ Path C. I hope I can see some of the groups in action. Let me know when there will be the “final” screening.