Posts tagged: video

Filmclub – bringing the power of cinema into your classroom

By robert, March 21, 2010 5:09 pm

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More and more teachers are hearing about Filmclub now they have been distributing promotional material in the TES and Teachers magazine.  I found out about it by chance and can thoroughly recommend it to others.

As part of the sign-up process you are asked to attend a short induction session.  Whilst the content of this session could easily be distributed on a DVD, I came away from the session feeling enthused and motivated to introduce Filmclub in my own school and make it work.  As well as discussing the technical details of the club (ordering films, registering on the website etc.) we discussed our favourite films and the effects they have had on our lives.  Whilst I didn’t appreciate the importance of this session straight away, it soon became apparent when Filmclub was up and running in my school and students were being asked to review movies they had seen.

So what does being a member of Filmclub involve?

  • Filmclub cover the cost of licensing movies to show in your school, and also provide you with a selection of films that you can order into school (distributed through Lovefilm).
  • You are expected to show a film a week out of school hours (evenings work best, lunchtimes aren’t long enough)
  • Students are asked to reflect on the film and write a short review (with a star rating) which appears on their website (see below)
  • Filmclub provide an excellent and pupil/school friendly website which both leaders and students can use.  Leaders order films through the sites, can see movie requests and reviews from their students, and can put up announcements about upcoming films.  Students can read about upcoming screenings at the school, they can leave reviews (either just a star rating or a full review) and can request movies they would like to see (although the requests tend to be movies that they have seen before rather than something different).

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  • Filmclub provide promotional materials (wipe-clean advertising posters, lanyards and ID tags) to use in your own school.
  • The possibility of receiving funding to support your film club, and possible speakers/visitors into your school.

My experience to date.

I initially launched film club through a school assembly and instantly grabbed the attention of both staff and students, all of whom were eager to share their favourite movies together with a reason.  The Filmclub-supplied “Power of Film” montage was enjoyed by all, and many students were eager to participate.

Students were keen to be part of the Filmclub and the website helps keep the interest between sessions (login reminders are written on member’s ID cards and clipped onto their lanyards).  Students have watched two films after school so far and interest keeps growing as word gets around.  After each film we have a discussion about the film, what we liked about it and why.  We also meet one lunchtime a week where we can watch the ends of films (when we ran out of time) and also review films shown (and upload some of these onto the website).

Less able students enjoy filming video reviews (using flip video cameras or similar), recording audio reviews (using TTS Easi-speak recorders) or simply photographing each other holding up comment cards.  These are shown on our school-wide TV system.

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I’ve tried to choose movies that students wouldn’t have seen before, and have let myself be guided by the “Filmclub recommends” section on the website.  It is also possible to search for films by theme (e.g. bullying), by age range or by other criteria.

Students have been very positive about our film club and I get asked questions about upcoming films several times a week.  There are films suitable for all ages (even some with a 15 certificate) and I would imagine students from primary, secondary and special education being equally enthused by this scheme.

What next?

As well as showing movies to students, we have a few ideas of what else we can do with our film club.

  • Joint parent/student screenings – to get parents into school and talking to staff
  • Induction of new students – getting year 6 students in from our feeder school for a shared screening, helping familiarise them with some of students and premises.
  • Oscars event – complete with red carpet and paparazzi outside, as part of an awards or celebration event.
  • Linking films to special events at school – e.g. book day, poetry day, anti-bullying week

Do you run a film club at your school?  Do you have any ideas of how we can expand film club to a wider audience or involve parents?

Grabbing clips from DVD – its easier than you think!

By robert, February 17, 2010 10:06 pm

We have a camcorder at work that records straight to DVD.  Of course the price you pay for this convenience is a lack of flexibility.  I needed some clips off a handful of old DVDs to use in a presentation.  I needed clips off the DVDs in the easiest way possible and in a format I could re-edit easily (using Windows Live Movie Maker for simplicity).

VLC

I managed to grab several clips using VLC following these steps.  First of all enable advanced options

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Then play back your video/DVD.  Click on the red button to start and stop recording.  The recorded file is saved in your documents folder.  It is possible to change the output video format, however the defaults worked fine with movie maker. [Mac users – I believe you press Shift & Command & R instead]

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Unfortunately I had problems with one of the DVDs so I had to use a different method.

Handbrake and K-Lite pack.

I installed the K-Lite pack to give me codecs I would need later on.  (Without the codecs from this pack windows movie maker was not able to use the audio on captured files in AAC format).

Handbrake is simple to use, but the files it generates will probably need some editing/trimming unless you need the whole DVD.

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(You can also use handbrake to convert DVDs into a format suitable for an iPod/iPhone just by changing the preset at stage 2).

That’s all there is to it.  If you are grabbing clips from DVD make sure you own the copyright or else you could get into bother!

Recording lesson outcomes with video

By Rob, February 1, 2010 9:40 pm

Secondary teachers tend to forget what a useful tool video can be in your lessons, even I do sometimes!  I’ve a selection of devices that record video but my students’ favourite device is my Flip camera.

In the past week three different groups have made use of video recording in their lessons.  Two of the groups videoed themselves – in the format of a news report on climate change, and an anti-drugs video.  Unfortunately I’m not able to show these videos outside of school but the third group however decided to video their experiments so that they could watch them again, and show them to pupils who were absent from the lesson.

This is the video they recorded (I just did the editing).

If a picture is worth a thousand words, a video must be worth a thousand pictures.  Learners who have special needs respond well to this medium, and it can be a tremendous motivator and confidence booster.

Staff in my school have finally become confident at using digital photography, but we spend a fortune printing out photographs to put in folders that no-body looks at.   Staff members who want to keep digital copies of photographs have to pass them to our technician who stores them on an encrypted drive (as per our data protection policy).  It’s taken 10 years to get staff members using email and digital photographs, so videos may require a few more years of training before adoption!

I’d be interested to hear from anyone, especially in the special education field, who uses digital media with their classes for any purpose.  Contact me or leave a comment below.

Pupils use Windows Movie Maker to create Anti-drugs videos

By Rob, June 19, 2009 8:25 am

We were short of time and pupils hadn’t got time to record their own video clips for a drugs awareness video.  Instead pupils used a series of still images and windows movie maker to create a slideshow.  They then used a microphone to narrate the advert.
The resulting adverts weren’t as scientific as I would have liked (despite asking!) but pupils hadn’t used Windows movie maker to do this before, and spent so long worrying about talking into the mic that the content got neglected.  This wouldn’t be a problem if you carried out this type of activity regularly.
The video is typical of the ones my year 11 class created (remember we are a special school!).



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