digital media

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Through Digital Media, Students Portray Life After Oil Spill

“Egret” by Alexis Babineaux, age 11

In the aftermath of the biggest oil spill in American history last year, a group of teachers decided to provide a forum for students to record the devastating effects on their communities, environment, and culture. The following excerpt, from Spotlight on Digital Media and Learning, describes how educators used digital media to create an interactive, student-driven space called Voices on the Gulf.

By Josh Karp

“There’s not much of a teacher voice on the site. We begin with the students’ questions and not our questions,” explains Paul Allison, one of the project’s creators. “We work really hard in the background helping students come up with their own explorations. That’s an important part of our work.”

This has meant different things in different classrooms. Using a method known as i-search (as opposed to “research”) students came up with their own issues, found their own sources and did their own investigation of the topics they chose.

Kaylie Bonin, a 4th-grader in Margaret Simon’s class, wanted to write about the effects of the oil spill on birds. She used an interactive whiteboard to create an illustrated short story about a plover (a small coastal wading bird) named Clover who uses his smarts to “make a difference,” by rallying the dolphins to dive deep and stir up oil-eating micro-organisms to assist in the cleanup effort. (Read the story here.) The story generated such positive response that Bonin intends to self-publish her book using online tools and donate the proceeds from its sale to the National Audubon Society.

“Meeting” students from New York and other places far from rural Louisiana has motivated Bonin and exposed her to a larger world.

“It was exciting because you didn’t even know these people before,” Bonin, age 10, says. “But [through Voices on the Gulf] you get to meet new people and see what they think. I think it’s valuable to see the different perspectives of people who aren’t right there.”

Sixth-grader Alexis Babineaux, who posted a spare, powerful poem from the vantage point of an egret, didn’t realize how much of an impact she was making.

“I didn’t know how much it affected people. Some shared their personal stories,” says Babineaux, age 11. “I liked how they opened up to me. It feels good to have people that don’t even know you want you to write more and see what you have to offer.”

Simon says that the peer interaction has allowed her to push her students further in their work. When she thinks someone’s work needs improvement before it goes online, Simon says that they need only look at their classmates struggling to find better metaphors or push their writing – and the positive comments that come afterwards – for motivation.

“The site has inspired a lot of creativity, and the motivation of the feedback is very valuable,” says Simon. “When you are with a student and give them feedback, that’s one thing. But, if another student in New York or across the globe gives them feedback – that gives it weight.”

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Creating Media Connects Kids to Global Events

Flickr: Listen Up!

By Sara Bernard

Over the past five years, more than 27,000 students from Australia to Senegal to San Francisco have made films and other media about a wide range of subjects — from young refugees, to how to improve public education in the U.S., to environmental preservation, racial and gender discrimination, and more. They’ve produced their work in and outside of school and have taken it to festivals like Cinequest and Sundance.

The common thread with all these projects is Adobe Youth Voices (AYV), which is part of the Adobe Foundation. As a non-profit arm of a for-profit company, AYV supports  youth media and education organizations (including Listen Up!, the Bay Area Video Coalition, Reel Works, Radio Rookies, iEARN, and the Intel Computer Clubhouse Network) by providing grants, collaborative partnerships, professional development, tech tools and resources, and a worldwide network of teachers, students, and professionals making media together.

The premise behind the program: Media-making enables students to express themselves, address important global issues, and — as they’re using the latest technology to work on community-based projects, still a rare breed in most classrooms – to “bridge that gap between school and what’s going to happen when they leave school,” says AYV program manager Patricia Cogley. Continue reading