ADVANCED MOVIE MAKING - AIS-R Virtual School
Transcription
ADVANCED MOVIE MAKING - AIS-R Virtual School
American International School - Riyadh P.O. Box 990 Riyadh 11421, Saudi Arabia Tel: 966-1-491-4270 Fax: 966-1-491-7101 E-mail: [email protected] E-mail: [email protected] [email protected] Dr. Brian Matthews, Ed.D Superintendent Craig Randall High School Principal Hal Ott HS Assistant Principal / IB Coord. Website: www.aisr.org ADVANCED MOVIE MAKING Course Instructor: Mr. Bryan Wiedeman Email Address: [email protected] Moodle Course Name: Multimedia Course Code: HS405 Learning Overview This production course gives students hands-on experience in producing video. Students will study effective camera use and video media to create projects for specific audiences. This course is project oriented, and is aimed at helping students learn how to plan and implement a movie projects through all stages of production. Students will regularly work in teams on these projects. Students will work primarily with Final Cut Pro X and Motion 6. This course is project oriented, and is aimed at helping students learn how to set deadlines, work in a self-disciplined environment and critically analyze each other’s work. The majority of the work will be produced using iMac computers. Student Responsibilities • • • • • Academic Honor & Meeting Deadlines Respect for self and others; respect for the learning environment and school rules Arriving on time with the required materials and prepared to learn Hard work, curiosity, enthusiasm, and collaboration Courage to come forward when having difficulty and not understanding the material Learning Materials • • • • Access to a computer at home with an Internet connection 3 ring binder Headphones 32USB to be left in class Assessment Formative assessments measure a student’s progress throughout a period of instruction (i.e. quizzes, rough drafts/initial attempts, homework, dress rehearsals, etc.). Formative assessments receive feedback designed to help students improve (i.e. grades, rubrics, comments, peer editing, etc.). Summative assessments measure a student’s achievement at the end of a period of instruction (i.e. tests, exams, final drafts/attempts, assignments, projects, and performances, etc.). Summative assessments count for a larger percentage of a student’s final grade than formative assessments. IB WORLD SCHOOL NEASC ACCREDITED BY THE NEW ENGLAND ASSOCIATION OF SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES CIS ACCREDITED BY THE COUNCIL OF INTERNATIONAL SCHOOLS Grading Quizzes Projects Final Project 20% 50% 30% After School Learning (ASL) Students are expected to attend After School Learning in my classroom when they are struggling or their grade is below a C-. My ASL will be updated weekly on my Moodle Page. My scheduled ASL day is Saturday. Late Work Policy Students are expected to submit assignments before the designated deadlines. Meeting deadlines requires responsibility and students should manage their time and prioritize so deadlines are successfully met. To support students’ efforts in meeting this expectation, teachers shall (a) announce deadlines in advance (b) provide sufficient time as determined by their professional judgment (c) post assignments and their deadlines on Moodle. Late assignments must be submitted before the assignment has been scored and handed back. When students submit assignments after the deadlines and do not have an excused absence from school on the day of the deadline, the following grade deductions apply: 1 Day Late = 10% deduction 2 Days Late = 15% deduction 3 Days Late = 20% deduction Assignments not submitted within three days after the deadline will receive no credit unless the student attends the first G.I.F.T. following the deadline. Students who complete a late assignment during the G.I.F.T. immediately following the three-day late period may submit the assignment for a maximum of 60%. Assignments not completed and submitted by the end of the designated G.I.F.T. will be recorded as a zero. This policy applies to AIS-R grades and to the AIS-R grade component of IB assignments also entered as AIS-R grades. (IB assignment grades submitted to IB are graded according to the IB rubric.) IB WORLD SCHOOL NEASC ACCREDITED BY THE NEW ENGLAND ASSOCIATION OF SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES CIS ACCREDITED BY THE COUNCIL OF INTERNATIONAL SCHOOLS